Abstract

Inhalation of short-lived radon progeny is an important cause of lung cancer. To characterize the absorbed doses in the bronchial region of the airways due to inhaled radon progeny, mostly regional lung deposition models, like the Human Respiratory Tract Model (HRTM) of the International Commission on Radiological Protection, are used. However, in this model the site specificity of radiation burden in the airways due to deposition and fast airway clearance of radon progeny is not described. Therefore, in the present study, the Radact version of the stochastic lung model was used to quantify the cellular radiation dose distribution at airway generation level and to simulate the kinetics of the deposited radon progeny resulting from the moving mucus layer. All simulations were performed assuming an isotope ratio typical for an average dwelling, and breathing mode characteristic of a healthy adult sitting man. The study demonstrates that the cell nuclei receiving high doses are non-uniformly distributed within the bronchial airway generations. The results revealed that the maximum of the radiation burden is at the first few bronchial airway generations of the respiratory tract, where most of the lung carcinomas of former uranium miners were found. Based on the results of the present simulations, it can be stated that regional lung models may not be fully adequate to describe the radiation burden due to radon progeny. A more realistic and precise calculation of the absorbed doses from the decay of radon progeny to the lung requires deposition and clearance to be simulated by realistic models of airway generations.

Highlights

  • In terms of detrimental health effects, the most important source of natural ionizing radiation is inhaled progenies of 222Rn

  • Deposition fraction values of the unattached radon progeny within the large bronchial airways decrease monotonously with increase in generation number

  • The results of this study demonstrate that the Radact version of the stochastic lung model (SLM) model can provide valuable information on the distribution of absorbed doses due to inhaled short-lived radon progeny at airway generation level

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Summary

Introduction

In terms of detrimental health effects, the most important source of natural ionizing radiation is inhaled progenies of 222Rn (in the following called radon progeny). Radiation and Environmental Biophysics (2020) 59:173–183 performed (Lubin and Boice 1997; Lubin 1999; Pavia et al 2003) These studies concluded that the radon-related risk of lung cancer varied appreciably from one study to another, which was mainly due to the different methodologies used in these individual studies to analyse the data. Because the number of exposed individuals of the general population is much higher than that of miners, a considerable number of lung cancer cases can be caused by radon progeny in the general population This fact demonstrates that the reduction of health risks associated with low levels of radon exposure is an important task of radiation protection

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