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  • Title: Late effects in the mouse small intestine after a clinically relevant multifractionated radiation treatment.
    Author: Dewit L, Oussoren Y.
    Journal: Radiat Res; 1987 Jun; 110(3):372-84. PubMed ID: 3588844.
    Abstract:
    Late radiation effects were investigated in the mouse small intestine after a daily fractionated radiation treatment. Mice were given 14 X 3 Gy in 2 weeks over a partial abdominal irradiation field. There was evidence for late injury in the intestinal epithelium, the submucosa, and the subserosa. Late damage in the epithelium was shown histologically by a reduced crypt number and villus atrophy at 3 and 6 months but not at 24 h after the end of treatment. The reduction in crypt number was significant in the ileum at 3 and 6 months after irradiation: 100 +/- 4 and 98 +/- 5 (SEM) per circumference, respectively, versus 132 +/- 3 and 146 +/- 6 in age-matched controls (P less than 0.01, t test). The mitotic activity in the crypts of the irradiated animals was significantly increased at all investigated times, suggesting a prolonged but insufficient compensatory response to maintain the mucosal integrity. The repercussion on intestinal epithelial function was, at least in part, reflected by a progressively reduced body weight gain up to 5 g at 3 months after treatment. The ability of the surviving crypt stem cells to form microcolonies after irradiation, however, was not impaired. Evidence for injury in the submucosa was provided from macroscopic and histological examination. Macroscopically, at 6 months after treatment, narrowed and rigid bowel segments surrounded by fibrotic adhesions were observed, causing partial intestinal obstruction. In addition, sometimes focal areas of hemorrhage and infarction in small bowel segments were present. Histologically, diffuse and pronounced submucosal edema without increased fibrosis was seen, together with markedly dilated small blood vessels in focal areas of macroscopic intestinal infarction. The intestinal perfusion, as assessed by 86Rb extraction, was significantly but transiently reduced at 3 months after irradiation. These data suggest mainly late effects in the small intestine after this daily fractionated irradiation treatment. The reduced number of epithelial cells and the submucosal edema are possibly mediated by radiation injury in the intestinal microvasculature.
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