Low-dose radiation therapy (LDRT) for COVID-19 and its deadlier variants

被引:0
|
作者
Rachna Kapoor
James S. Welsh
Vikas Dhawan
Seyed Alireza Javadinia
Edward J. Calabrese
Gaurav Dhawan
机构
[1] Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center,Stritch School of Medicine
[2] Edward Hines Jr VA Hospital,COVID 19 Facilities
[3] Loyola University Chicago,Clinical Research Development Unit
[4] Command Hospital (Western Command),Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health and Health Sciences
[5] Hospital Research Development Committee,undefined
[6] Sabzevar University of Medical Sciences,undefined
[7] University of Massachusetts,undefined
[8] Sri Guru Ram Das University of Health Sciences,undefined
来源
Archives of Toxicology | 2021年 / 95卷
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摘要
Coronavirus variants are gaining strongholds throughout the globe. Despite early signals that SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus case numbers are easing up in the United States and during the middle of a (not so easy) vaccination roll out, the country has passed a grim landmark of 600,000 deaths. We contend that these numbers would have been much lower if the medical community undertook serious investigations into the potential of low doses of radiation (LDRT) as a mainstream treatment modality for COVID-19 pneumonia. LDRT has been posited to manifest anti-infectious and anti-inflammatory properties at doses of 0.3–1.0 Gy via the activation of the Nrf-2 pathway. Although some researchers are conducting well-designed clinical trials on the potential of LDRT, the deep-rooted, blind, and flawed acceptance of the Linear No-Threshold (LNT) model for ionizing radiation has led to sidelining of this promising therapy and thus unimaginable numbers of deaths in the United States.
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页码:3425 / 3432
页数:7
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