[Radiation Biology] Ep 4 – Fundamental Principles of Radiobiology
Radiobiology is the study of how ionizing radiation interacts with and injures living systems, and understanding the factors that govern that injury is central to both radiation protection and therapeutic application. This episode opens with the physical factors that influence radiosensitivity — Linear Energy Transfer (LET), Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE), protraction, and fractionation. LET is examined as the rate of energy deposition per micrometer of soft tissue, with low-LET radiation such as X-rays causing indirect, often repairable DNA damage through free radical formation, while high-LET radiation such as alpha particles causes dense, direct, and frequently irreparable damage. RBE is introduced as the comparative measure of how effectively a given radiation type produces a specific biologic response relative to 250 kVp X-rays as the standard reference. The direct proportionality between LET and RBE is discussed alongside the clinical rationale for protracted and fractionated dose delivery, which allows intracellular repair and reduces biologic effect.
The biological factors modifying radiosensitivity are then addressed — including the Oxygen Enhancement Ratio (OER), age, recovery, chemical agents, and hormesis. The OER describes the amplifying role of oxygen in radiation damage, with low-LET radiation showing the highest OER values due to free radical interaction with oxygen producing irreparable organic peroxides, while high-LET radiation produces direct damage regardless of oxygen presence. The episode closes with a thorough treatment of radiation dose-response relationships, covering the four curve types — Linear Non-Threshold (LNT), Linear Threshold (LT), Non-Linear Non-Threshold (NLNT), and Non-Linear Threshold (NLT, or sigmoid) — alongside the Linear Quadratic model, and concludes by distinguishing deterministic from stochastic radiation effects.
Content is structured to support radiologic technology programs preparing for imaging coursework and ARRT certification review. This episode aligns with the Safety content category — Radiation Physics and Radiobiology subcategory — of the ARRT Radiography Examination Content Specifications.
Audio content is adapted from original instructional material developed by Professor Sanjay Arya, M.S., R.T.(R)(MR) for radiologic technology education. Part of the Radiation Biology series — Quantum Imaging Lab.
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