Radiation research
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Selective irradiation of the vasculature of the rat spinal cord was used in this study, which was designed specifically to address the question as to whether it is the endothelial cell or the glial progenitor cell that is the target responsible for late white matter necrosis in the CNS. Selective irradiation of the vascular endothelium was achieved by the intraperitoneal (ip) administration of a boron compound known as BSH (Na(2)B(12)H(11)SH), followed by local irradiation with thermal neutrons. The blood-brain barrier is known to exclude BSH from the CNS parenchyma. ⋯ The response to irradiation with an equivalent dose of X rays (ED(90): 23 Gy) was intermediate between these extremes as it was to thermal neutrons in the presence of BPA at a slightly lower dose equivalent to the approximate ED(60) for radiation myelopathy. The conclusions from these studies, performed at dose levels approximately iso-effective for radiation-induced myelopathy as a consequence of white matter necrosis, were that the large differences observed in glial progenitor survival were directly related to the dose distribution in the parenchyma. These observations clearly indicate the relative importance of the dose to the vascular endothelium as the primary event leading to white matter necrosis.