Hiroshima Bomb
Mostrando 1-10 de 10 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Representações de Hiroshima: a problemática da representação a partir de Gen Pés Descalços / Representations of Hiroshima: the issues of representation from Braefoot Gen
The purpose of this paper is to reflect and understand how the representations about the horror are build, especially of Hiroshima, focusing on the violent event of the atomic bomb from the narrative of Nakazawa Keiji, Barefoot Gen, making links with other works that also represent catastrophe. To this end, a discussion was held about the possibility of writ
IBICT - Instituto Brasileiro de Informação em Ciência e Tecnologia. Publicado em: 25/11/2011
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2. AVALIAÇÃO IMUNOLÓGICA DOS INDIVÍDUOS EXPOSTOS À RADIAÇÃO IONIZANTE DO 137Cs, NO ACIDENTE RADIOATIVO DE GOIÂNIA (BRASIL).
On September 13, 1987, it happened in Goiânia the largest radioactive accident of the western hemisphere. A capsule containing Cesium 137 (137Cs), originating from an unit of radiotherapy, was violated contaminating more than 200 people and taking 4 individuals to death. From the beginning of the accident, the health of the involved individuals started to b
Publicado em: 2006
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3. Absenteeism among survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
Atomic bomb survivors who worked at the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission in Hiroshima during the years 1968-71 and held handbooks identifying them as survivors took significantly more days of both annual leave and sick leave than did matched and paired control subjects. These differences in leave-taking patterns are considered to be due to behavioural causes
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4. Radiation unlikely to be responsible for high cancer rates among distal Hiroshima A-bomb survivors
Springer Japan.
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5. Hiroshima survivors exposed to very low doses of A-bomb primary radiation showed a high risk for cancers
Springer Japan.
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6. Answer to the comments by Eric J. Grant et al. in “Radiation unlikely to be responsible for high cancer rates among distal Hiroshima A-bomb survivors”
Springer Japan.
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7. Search for mutations affecting protein structure in children of atomic bomb survivors: preliminary report.
A total of 289,868 locus tests, based on 28 different protein phenotypes and using one-dimensional electrophoresis to detect variant proteins, has yielded one probable mutation in the offspring of "proximally exposed" parents, who received an estimated average gonadal exposure of 31 to 39 rem in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. There were no mu
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8. Greetings: 50 years of Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission–Radiation Effects Research Foundation studies
The Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission was established in Hiroshima in 1947 and in Nagasaki in 1948 under the auspices of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences to initiate a long-term and comprehensive epidemiological and genetic study of the atomic bomb survivors. It was replaced in 1975 by the Radiation Effects Research Foundation which is a nonprofit Ja
The National Academy of Sciences.
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9. Cytogenetic "rogue" cells: what is their frequency, origin, and evolutionary significance?
Among 102,170 cultured lymphocytes obtained from 9818 individuals from Hiroshima, Japan, aged 9 to 37 years and scored for chromosomal abnormalities, 24 cells that exhibited an extreme degree of damage were encountered. The damage consists of multiple dicentric and even tricentric chromosomes, as well as numerous fragments, many with the appearance of "doubl
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10. Mortality in the Children of Atomic Bomb Survivors and Controls
A continuing study of mortality rates among children born to survivors of the atomic bombings and a suitable group of controls has been updated; the average interval between birth and verification of death or survival is 17 years. The mortality experience is now based on 18,946 children liveborn to parents one or both of whom were proximally exposed, receivi