Dental and medical x-rays cause heart disease, new research discovers

Low-dose radiation from medical and dental x-rays could cause heart disease, a new study suggests.

Researchers from Imperial College London say they started researching a possible connection after numerous studies had shown that workers exposed to long-term doses of radiation, such as in the nuclear industry, had far higher levels of heart disease.

From this, the research team have drawn a mathematical model to suggest that people who have medical and dental x-rays could face similar risks.  Radiation kills monocytes, which mop up a protein called MCP-1.  High levels of the protein are thought to cause inflammation that, in turn, triggers cardiovascular disease.

Research team leader Dr Mark Little says the model suggests that risks from x-rays may have been “substantially underestimated”.

(Source: PLOS Computational Biology, 2009; 5: e1000539).

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