Radiation Exposure: The Brutal Dangers to Human DNA

This is an excerpt from an article contained in The Australian. It puts into perspective the dangers Japan now faces from radiation being emitted from the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear reactors and introduces many to a most (now) dreaded scientific unit, the millisievert (mSv). A sievert (Sv) is defined as follows.
a unit of ionizing radiation absorbed dose equivalent in the International System of Units, obtained as a product of the absorbed dose measure in grays and a dimensionless factor, stipulated by the International Commission on Radiological Protection, and indicating the biological effectiveness of the radiation.If you pray, start.
Some reports have stated that radiation levels at the reactors have reached 400 millisieverts an hour - enough for experts to urge a rapid rotation of emergency crews, to limit their exposure to its DNA-destroying energy.Tilman Ruff, a public health physician at the University of Melbourne's Nossal Institute for Global Health, said this intensity of radiation was far above the maximum safe level for the general public, of just 1 millisievert per annum, and much higher even than the limit for workers in occupational settings, of 20 millisieverts annually.
At these levels, the 50 workers still on site ran the real risk of developing acute radiation sickness if not given proper protection, said Associate Professor Ruff, while the general population faced separate but no less real risks from chronic exposure to any lower-level contaminants released into the environment.
Symptoms of acute radiation poisoning start at doses above half to one sievert (500 to 1000 millisieverts), with symptoms such as nausea, headache and fatigue.
Doses of between 2 and 4 sieverts can cause bleeding, nausea and ulceration of the intestinal tract, and can cause a horrible death, either within a few days of exposure, or after a more lingering illness such as anaemia, infection and blood loss take their toll.
Higher doses can damage the brain and central nervous system directly, causing coma and death within days or hours.
However, the bigger potential threat facing Japan lies in a repeat of the Chernobyl accident, in which radioactive contamination was blown over the surrounding area and into the atmosphere.
While this has not yet occurred in Japan, the health effects in this situation would be caused by a more insidious and chronic exposure to radiation of a different type.
Intense bursts of radiation that cause rapidly fatal cases of acute poisoning are often caused by gamma rays, a type of ionising radiation that, like X-rays, damages cells and DNA by stripping atoms of some of their charged particles.
However, radioactive isotopes often emitted in nuclear accidents in many cases emit a different type of radiation called alpha particles.
Outside the body, these are not usually a problem, because they do not travel long distances and cannot penetrate the skin or even a sheet of paper.
But swallowed or inhaled, they can do great damage.
"The lethal dose for a human can be no more, in energy terms, than the heat in a cup of coffee," Professor Ruff said. "It's not that it's a particularly large amount of energy - it's just packaged in such a way that's particularly damaging to the large molecules that are key to how we work."
The isotope iodine-131 - which accounts for about 3 per cent of the products of uranium fission - is easily absorbed by the thyroid gland, which produces hormones essential for cell metabolism. Once there, there is little to protect surrounding DNA from the particle bombardment that alpha radiation involves.
While doctors could give people non-radioactive iodine as a preventative measure to saturate the thyroid and prevent it taking up any radioactive molecules, this had to be taken within 36 hours of exposure.
Professor Ruff said reactors contained a "complex soup" of radioactive isotopes, and caesium-137 was a particular threat as it behaved in chemical terms like potassium and was readily taken up by cells throughout the body.
Likewise, strontium-90 behaved like calcium, leading to its accumulation in bones and teeth.
Iodine-131 has a half-life of just eight days, which means that after this time half the substance has decayed, in this case into the inert gas xenon. But many other radioactive compounds persist for much longer.
Strontium-90 and caesium-137 both have half lives of about 30 years, while plutonium-239 - another product of the Japanese reactors, which Professor Ruff describes as "probably the most hazardous substance in existence" - has a half-life of 24,200 years.
No treatments exist that can reverse the damage involved in radiation poisoning, although doctors can try to treat symptoms, for instance by giving antibiotics to prop up a failing immune system.
Professor Ruff said any large radiation leak could have serious consequences over a wide area, as the Chernobyl blast had resulted in radiation hotspots in areas as far-flung as northern Sweden, southern Greece and other parts of Europe.
It was unlikely to affect Australia, as the separation of climate systems in the northern and southern hemispheres would make it difficult for airborne contamination to cross the equator.
But for those in Japan, increases in cancer rates could be expected to follow a significant radiation leak - as had already been seen in the 23 years since the Ukraine accident. "At Chernobyl, 42 workers died from acute radiation sickness, all within the first month," Professor Ruff said.
"But it's estimated that somewhere between 10,000 and 60,000 people in total will die from fall-out, and from cancer, over a period of decades."
Rates of thyroid cancer around Chernobyl rose within five years of the accident, Professor Ruff said, while rates of childhood leukemia rose within 10 years.
"Then the various solid tumours - lung, stomach, ovary, breast, colon - (have started to rise after) 10 years and onwards," he said.
"The incidence of cancer in Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors is still going up.
"You can't put a name on it and say, 'That cancer is due to that radiation exposure', because cancer caused by radiation doesn't look any different to cancer caused by smoking, or anything else. But overall, it could be a very significant increase in rates."
Other experts yesterday sought to tone down the health concerns.
Peter Burns, former chief executive of the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency, said radiation releases so far in Japan were "I suspect . . . a million times, probably several million times, less" than in Chernobyl, where basic prevention measures would have greatly lessened the health impacts.
"The problem at Chernobyl (was that) people still drank the milk and ate the vegetables," he said.


Comments: 4
Is radiation to blame for your warped view of the world?
Joking!
I think what you say is nothing more than an act. It's far easier to scream fire than to put forth solutions to problems.
If you really want to fear something better check and see if Larry is reading your private e-mail.
I write this comment in the hopes that maybe you would say something to the world as only you can. Yesterday I was in the supermarket buying food for my St. Patrick's day dinner when as I was leaving I noticed the front page of a news paper. In all honesty I don't remember which one it was. I was too shocked and then couldn't see through my tears. I am crying now even as I write this. We all see how horrible the tragedy in Japan is and my heart breaks for all those who are suffering, not only in japan but else where around the world from all these natural disasters. But as much as people need to know what is happening around the world. I feel reporters need to know when to pull back. You see the front cover was a picture of a woman in tears on her knees in a pile of rubble holding the hands of her dead mother as they stuck out of the ground. The sight of the picture broke my heart, but at the same time it angered me greatly. The media needs to remember that yes, it is news, but also that they are human beings. Human beings suffering unimaginable pain and loss. I think they should be allowed some dignity and not have their very personal pain plastered over a front page for all to see. How would the person who allowed that photo in to print feel if it was them, their pain being used to sell papers. Please take one night to remind your viewers and fellow reporters and those in charge to show some consideration and respect for the pain of others in this horrible tragedy.
I notice that the guys on this network are frauds!
They very rarely if ever answer the comments on their blogs yet they expect you to read them.
Come on Lionel admit it you are a fraud! Just a ghost in a room pointing an empty sleeve at everything.
You do nothing but rant and rave. I'm surprised they do not put a bib on you.
I'm surprised a person that is so unbalanced as you is married and have kids. I sure hope you do not spew this nonsence aound the poor things.
Maybe you will surprise people and actually do a piece that for once has solutions instead of just pointing fingers. Its easy to point a finger while doing nothing constructive.
Lionel keep up the good work. You are one of the few if, If not the only one on local tv reporting on actual news. Sometimes I watch and can't believe you actually able to say the things u are saying (govt controlled media, black ops etc). It's sad that most people listen to your segment and read ur blog and think all you do is complain. Wake up sheeple! Lionel is awake! It's time the American people awake from their slumber. Remember kids " truth is stranger than fiction. "