RESUMO
The aim of the present study was to perform a cytogenetic analysis in peripheral lymphocytes of 36 individuals occupationally exposed to low levels of ionizing radiation, and compare the results with 36 controls, using the chromosomal aberrations test (CA), sensitivity to bleomycin and cytokinesis-blocked micronucleus assay (MN). The frequencies of CA/100 cells observed for the exposed workers were not significantly higher than in controls (P>0.05). The mean break/cell (b/c) for the controls and exposed workers was 0.59±0.39 and 0.57±0.29, respectively (P>0.01). The MN frequencies were significantly increased (P<0.01) in exposed workers (6.13±3.18) in comparison with controls (5.11±3.85). The mean MN was also statistically higher in the non-smoker exposed when compared with non-smoker controls, 5.80±3.09 and 5.15±4.08, respectively (P<0.01). The cytogenetic analysis of MN proved to be the most sensitive biological marker to assess the cellular response to low levels of irradiation.
RESUMO
During anatomopathologic study, including immunohistochemistry, about chagasic pancreatitis experimentally induced in four month aged male non-isogenic hamsters, weighing 107.8 ±: 10.9g, lymphoma infiltration was observed in a 15 month-aged normal control animal. The neoplasia was disclosed on the occasion of necropsy studies, 330 days after the beginning of experiment. Similar lymphoma was not found in the remainder normal controls (n=73), nor in the group of infected hamsters age and weight matched (n=94). The neoplasia histopathologic and immunohistochemical changes were consistent with non-Hodgkin diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; nevertheless, the hypothesis of eventual leukemic origin was not entirely excluded. Experimentally induced lymphomas have been related in laboratory animals; however, cases of spontaneously occurring lymphoma have been infrequently described in hamsters. In the present case, the development of the disease could have some relation with the animal aging process