THE EFFECTS OF RADIOACTIVE (IONIZING) RADIATION ON THE HUMAN BODY

Authors

  • Doliyev Ahmadjon Ulug’bek o’g’li 1st-year student, Faculty of Medicine, Asia International University
  • Boboqulova Muxtaram Khamroyevna Assistant, Department of General Technical Sciences, Asia International University

Keywords:

ionizing radiation, radioactive radiation, DNA damage, DSB, ROS, clustered damage, deterministic effects, stochastic effects, acute radiation syndrome, cancer risk, Life Span Study, Chernobyl accident, Sievert, LNT model, radiation protection, ALARA, radiation monitoring.

Abstract

 Radioactive or ionizing radiation and its mechanisms of action on the human body, dose-dependent consequences, and long-term risks constitute one of the central topics in radiobiology, radiation epidemiology, and medical radiology. This article provides a detailed analysis of the physical-chemical properties of radiation, the processes of damage at the cellular and molecular levels—particularly the direct and indirect damage to DNA, as well as clustered damage mechanisms. Deterministic effects manifest as tissue and organ reactions at high doses and include the clinical stages of acute radiation syndrome, as well as damage to the hematopoietic, gastrointestinal, and central nervous systems, skin, eye lens, reproductive system, and circulatory system. Stochastic effects increase the probability of cancer and hereditary mutations. The study results confirm the existence of risk even at low doses and demonstrate the heightened radiosensitivity of children, pregnant women, and young organisms.  

References

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Published

2026-05-18

How to Cite

Doliyev Ahmadjon Ulug’bek o’g’li, & Boboqulova Muxtaram Khamroyevna. (2026). THE EFFECTS OF RADIOACTIVE (IONIZING) RADIATION ON THE HUMAN BODY. Ethiopian International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, 13(5), 1179–11181. Retrieved from https://eijmr.org/index.php/eijmr/article/view/6833