L'étude suggère le risque de cancer de l'uranium épuisé
L'uranium épuisé, qui est employé dans des munitions d'armure-perforation, endommage répandu l'ADN qui pourrait mener au cancer de poumon, selon une étude des effets de l'en métal sur les cellules humaines de poumon. L'étude ajoute à l'évidence croissante que du pose des problèmes de santé sur des champs de bataille longtemps après que les hostilités aient cessé.
Du est un sous-produit de l'amélioration en uranium pour l'énergie nucléaire. Il est beaucoup moins radioactif que d'autres isotopes en uranium, et sa densité - deux fois celle de fil - des marques il utile pour des coquilles d'armure et de perforation d'armure. It has been used in conflicts including Bosnia, Kosovo and Iraq and there have been increasing concerns about the health effects of DU dust left on the battlefield. In November, the Ministry of Defence was forced to counteract claims that apparent increases in cancers and birth defects among Iraqis in southern Iraq were due to DU in weapons.
Now researchers at the University of Southern Maine have shown that DU damages DNA in human lung cells. The team, led by John Pierce Wise, exposed cultures of the cells to uranium compounds at different concentrations.
The compounds caused breaks in the chromosomes within cells and stopped them from growing and dividing healthily. “These data suggest that exposure to particulate DU may pose a significant [DNA damage] risk and could possibly result in lung cancer,” the team wrote in the journal Chemical Research in Toxicology.
Previous studies have shown that uranium miners are at higher risk of lung cancer, but this has often been put down to the fact that miners are also exposed to radon, another cancer-causing chemical.
Prof Wise said it is too early to say whether DU causes lung cancer in people exposed on the battlefield because the disease takes several decades to develop.
“Our data suggest that it should be monitored as the potential risk is there,” he said.
Prof Wise and his team believe that microscopic particles of dust created during the explosion of a DU weapon stay on the battlefield and can be breathed in by soldiers and people returning after the conflict.
Once they are lodged in the lung even low levels of radioactivity would damage DNA in cells close by. “The real question is whether the level of exposure is sufficient to cause health effects. The answer to that question is still unclear,” he said, adding that there has as yet been little research on the effects of DU on civilians in combat zones. “Funding for DU studies is very sparse and so defining the disadvantages is hard,” he added.
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