Abstract

The harmful effects of ionizing radiation, like those of many other environmental agents, were first recognized in occupationally exposed workers. Within months after Roentgen's discovery of the X-ray, in 1896, radiation injuries began to be encountered in those working with the early equipment and sources. Among the first to experience such effects were: (1) Pierre Curie, who intentionally exposed the skin of his own arm to observe its reaction; (2) Marie Curie, who developed radiation burns on her fingers as a result of handling a small tube of radium enclosed in a thin metal box; and (3) Antoine Henri Becquerel, who burned the skin on his chest by carrying a tube of radium-bearing barium chloride in his vest pocket. The injuries noted initially were predominantly acute skin reactions on the hands, 96 cases of which were reported in one publication alone within 2 years after the discovery of the X-ray. Reactions of other tissues, however, also soon came to attention. For example, sterilizing effects of x rays on the testes of guinea pigs and rabbits were reported as early as 1903 and were paralleled by the observation of oligospermia and azoospermia in radiation workers. Within a decade many types ofmore » radiation injury had been observed, including the first cancer attributed to irradiation. Since these early observations nearly a century ago, study of radiation injury has received continuing impetus from the expanding uses of radiation in medicine, science, and industry, as well as from the military and peaceful applications of atomic energy. As a result, the harmful effects of ionizing radiation have been investigated more thoroughly than those of any other environmental agent, with far-reaching implications for preventive medicine and public health, in general, 40 refs., 5 figs., 6 tabs.« less

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