The Interaction between X-rays and 3 MeV Neutrons in the Skin of the Mouse Foot

Abstract
Mouse feet were irradiated with mixtures of 3 MeV neutrons and 140 kVp X-rays given simultaneously or within 24 hours of each other. The effects of different treatments were contrasted by comparing the doses required to give equal skin reactions. Irradiation was given as 1, 2, 4 or 8 equal fractions, in order to assess r.b.e. and the shapes of the underlying dose–response curves for mixed beams over a wide range of dose per fraction. All dose–effect curves were well fitted by a linear-quadratic (α, β) model. For X-rays and neutrons given simultaneously, the linear coefficient (α) decreased by a factor of 4·80 while the quadratic coefficient (β) increased by a factor of only 1·44 when the photon contamination in the beam increased from 11 to 100 per cent, with α/β changing from 95·0 to 13·8. The data from simultaneous X-ray and neutron irradiation were consistent with full interaction of those effects from the two radiations which give rise to the total quadratic component of effect. When the two radiations are separated by up to 24 h, this interaction decreases but does not entirely disappear.