(Press-News.org) AMHERST, Mass. – In two recently published peer-reviewed articles, toxicologist Edward Calabrese of the University of Massachusetts Amherst describes how regulators came to adopt the linear no threshold (LNT) dose-response approach to ionizing radiation exposure in the 1950s, which was later generalized to chemical carcinogen risk assessment.
He also offers further evidence to support his earlier assertions that two geneticists deliberately suppressed evidence to prevent the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS) from considering an alternative, threshold model, for which there was experimental support. Calabrese's articles appear in the July 26 and August 4 issues of Archives of Toxicology.
Calabrese says, "The regulatory research community needs to hear about this. This isn't an academic debate; it's practical, because all of our rules about chemical and low-level radiation are based on unvalidated assumptions and scientific panel decisions made without sound evidence. Now, after all these years, it's very hard when people have been frightened to death of any exposure whatsoever, to persuade them that we don't need to be scared by certain low-dose exposures."
The first of Calabrese's recent articles is a straightforward history of the LNT model for ionizing radiation mutation, a concept accepted by radiation geneticists in the 1950s and recommended by national and international advisory committees for risk assessment and human exposure guidelines and later generalized to chemical carcinogens ever since. It is now used by public health and regulatory agencies worldwide, he notes.
In the second of the two articles, Calabrese repeats his earlier accusations that the distinguished radiation geneticist Hermann Muller, in his acceptance speech for the 1946 Nobel Prize, "made deceptive statements" intended to "promote the acceptance of the linear dose-response model for risk assessment for ionizing radiation" and that Muller's advocacy agenda was "masked" by long-time colleague Curt Stern. Their actions affected "key publications in the mutation literature," enhancing acceptance of the linear dose-response and hiding "Muller's deceptions," Calabrese adds.
His own career-long research on hormesis, which is a non-linear, threshold-based or biphasic approach to dose-response and risk assessment for ionizing radiation and toxic chemicals, provides evidence that low-dose exposure of some chemicals and ionizing radiation are benign or even helpful. In three "substantial validation tests" of the threshold, hormesis and linear no-threshold models, Calabrese and colleagues say, "only the hermetic (biphasic) dose-response made consistently accurate predictions."
The UMass Amherst toxicologist has argued for many years that a reappraisal of cancer risk assessment methods is urgently needed because the LNT model was incorporated into U.S. regulatory policy based on faulty assumptions and by Muller and Stern's manipulation of the scientific literature.
Calabrese's interpretation of this history is supported by letters and other materials he has compiled, many from formerly classified files. Muller and Stern had done many of the key experiments contributing to health risk assessment of ionizing radiation and Muller served on NAS's Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation (BEAR) committee through which the linear dose-response approach to risk assessment became firmly entrenched, Calabrese related. He offers further evidence that the two successfully suppressed evidence from a key experiment with fruit fly sperm that challenged their views on dose-response.
INFORMATION:
Toxicologist says NAS panel 'misled the world' when adopting radiation exposure guidelines
Toxicologist Edward Calabrese reviews how a linear dose-response approach to ionizing radiation exposure was adopted and offers evidence supporting his view that 2 geneticists suppressed evidence to keep the NAS from considering a non-linear model
2013-08-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers slow light to a crawl in liquid crystal matrix
2013-08-14
WASHINGTON, Aug. 13, 2013—Light traveling in a vacuum is the Universe's ultimate speed demon, racing along at approximately 300,000 kilometers per second. Now scientists have found an effective new way to put a speed bump in light's path. Reported today in The Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Optics Express, researchers from France and China embedded dye molecules in a liquid crystal matrix to throttle the group velocity of light back to less than one billionth of its top speed. The team says the ability to slow light in this manner may one day lead to new technologies ...
ORNL finding goes beyond surface of oxide films
2013-08-14
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Aug. 13, 2013 – Better batteries, catalysts, electronic information storage and processing devices are among potential benefits of an unexpected discovery made by Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists using samples isolated from the atmosphere.
Researchers at the Department of Energy lab learned that key surface properties of complex oxide films are unaffected by reduced levels of oxygen during fabrication – an unanticipated finding with possible implications for the design of functional complex oxides used in a variety of consumer products, said ...
Even for cows, less can be more
2013-08-14
URBANA, Ill. – With little research on how nutrition affects reproductive performance in dairy cows, it is generally believed that a cow needs a higher energy intake before calving. Research by University of Illinois scientists challenges this accepted wisdom.
Animal sciences researcher Phil Cardoso said that this line of research was the result of an "accident." Students in animal sciences professor James Drackley's group compared cows fed before calving with diets containing the recommended energy levels to cows fed reduced energy diets. They found that the cows fed ...
UCSB anthropologists study testosterone spikes in non-competitive activities
2013-08-14
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– The everyday physical activities of an isolated group of forager-farmers in central Bolivia are providing valuable information about how industrialization and its associated modern amenities may impact health and wellness.
Studying short-term spikes in the testosterone levels of Tsimane men, UC Santa Barbara anthropologists Ben Trumble and Michael Gurven have found that the act of chopping down trees –– a physically demanding task that is critical to successful farming and food production –– results in greater increases in testosterone than ...
Prostate cancer screening: New data support watchful waiting
2013-08-14
PHILADELPHIA —Prostate cancer aggressiveness may be established when the tumor is formed and not alter with time, according to a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Researchers found that after the introduction of widespread prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening, the proportion of patients diagnosed with advanced-stage cancers dropped by more than six-fold in 22 years, but the proportion diagnosed with high Gleason grade cancers did not change substantially. This suggests that low-grade prostate cancers do ...
Baby corals pass the acid test
2013-08-13
Corals can survive the early stages of their development even under the tough conditions that rising carbon emissions will impose on them says a new study from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.
Globally, ocean acidification remains a major concern and scientists say it could have severe consequences for the health of adult corals, however, the evidence for negative effects on the early life stages of corals is less clear cut.
Dr Andrew Baird, Principal Research Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University, ...
Study finds 'ray' wings sold to consumers include vulnerable species & can be mislabeled
2013-08-13
Genetic testing by DNA Barcoding, has revealed which species are sold under the commercial term 'ray wings' in Ireland and the UK. The blonde ray, given the lowest rating for sustainability in the marine conservation society's good fish guide, was the most widely sold. Samples from the only retailer to label products as originating from more sustainable sources demonstrated high levels of mislabelling, substituted by more vulnerable species. Therefore, consumers cannot make informed purchasing decisions.
The research was conducted at the University of Salford and University ...
Mediterranean diet counteracts a genetic risk of stroke, study reports
2013-08-13
BOSTON (August 13, 2013, 10 am EDT) -- A gene variant strongly associated with development of type 2 diabetes appears to interact with a Mediterranean diet pattern to prevent stroke, report researchers from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (USDA HNRCA) at Tufts University and from the CIBER Fisiopatología de la Obesidad y Nutriciόn in Spain. Their results , published online today in Diabetes Care, are a significant advance for nutrigenomics, the study of the linkages between nutrition and gene function and their impact on human health, particularly ...
Stroke declines dramatically, still higher in Mexican-Americans
2013-08-13
A new study reports that the incidence of ischemic stroke—the most common type of stroke, caused by a clot in the blood vessels of the brain—among non-Hispanic Whites and Mexican Americans over age 60 has declined over the past decade. Most concerning, however, is that the increased relative burden of stroke comparing Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic Whites has not changed at all in the last decade. Overall, Mexican Americans suffer much more, 34%, from this disease than non-Hispanic Whites. Findings are published in Annals of Neurology, a journal of the American Neurological ...
Sugar is toxic to mice in 'safe' doses
2013-08-13
SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 13, 2013 – When mice ate a diet of 25 percent extra sugar – the mouse equivalent of a healthy human diet plus three cans of soda daily – females died at twice the normal rate and males were a quarter less likely to hold territory and reproduce, according to a toxicity test developed at the University of Utah.
"Our results provide evidence that added sugar consumed at concentrations currently considered safe exerts dramatic adverse impacts on mammalian health," the researchers say in a study set for online publication Tuesday, Aug. 13 in the journal ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Concerns over maternity provision for pregnant women in UK prisons
UK needs a national strategy to tackle harms of alcohol, argue experts
Aerobic exercise: a powerful ally in the fight against Alzheimer’s
Cambridge leads first phase of governmental project to understand impact of smartphones and social media on young people
AASM Foundation partners with Howard University Medical Alumni Association to provide scholarships
Protective actions need regulatory support to fully defend homeowners and coastal communities, study finds
On-chip light control of semiconductor optoelectronic devices using integrated metasurfaces
America’s political house can become less divided
A common antihistamine shows promise in treating liver complications of a rare disease complication
Trastuzumab emtansine improves long-term survival in HER2 breast cancer
Is eating more red meat bad for your brain?
How does Tourette syndrome differ by sex?
Red meat consumption increases risk of dementia and cognitive decline
Study reveals how sex and racial disparities in weight loss surgery have changed over 20 years
Ultrasound-directed microbubbles could boost immune response against tumours, new Concordia research suggests
In small preliminary study, fearful pet dogs exhibited significantly different microbiomes and metabolic molecules to non-fearful dogs, suggesting the gut-brain axis might be involved in fear behavior
Examination of Large Language Model "red-teaming" defines it as a non-malicious team-effort activity to seek LLMs' limits and identifies 35 different techniques used to test them
Most microplastics in French bottled and tap water are smaller than 20 µm - fine enough to pass into blood and organs, but below the EU-recommended detection limit
A tangled web: Fossil fuel energy, plastics, and agrichemicals discourse on X/Twitter
This fast and agile robotic insect could someday aid in mechanical pollination
Researchers identify novel immune cells that may worsen asthma
Conquest of Asia and Europe by snow leopards during the last Ice Ages uncovered
Researchers make comfortable materials that generate power when worn
Study finding Xenon gas could protect against Alzheimer’s disease leads to start of clinical trial
Protein protects biological nitrogen fixation from oxidative stress
Three-quarters of medical facilities in Mariupol sustained damage during Russia’s siege of 2022
Snow leopard fossils clarify evolutionary history of species
Machine learning outperforms traditional statistical methods in addressing missing data in electronic health records
AI–guided lung ultrasound by nonexperts
Prevalence of and inequities in poor mental health across 3 US surveys
[Press-News.org] Toxicologist says NAS panel 'misled the world' when adopting radiation exposure guidelinesToxicologist Edward Calabrese reviews how a linear dose-response approach to ionizing radiation exposure was adopted and offers evidence supporting his view that 2 geneticists suppressed evidence to keep the NAS from considering a non-linear model