Rad Bio Flashcards
Which particles have direct DNA damage?
High LET radiation = alpha, neutrons and protons
Which particles have indirect DNA damage?
Low LET radiation = x-rays, gamma rays, electrons They cause DNA damage via OH (free radicals)
Which particles ar directly ionizing?
charged particles - alpha, beta, protons, electrons
Whoch particles are indirectly ionizing?
neutrons, xrays and gamma rays
What are the decay equations?
N = N02n
At = A0e-0.693t/T1/2
When does Beta decay occur?
Too many neutrons: neutron converted into a proton
Neutron → p+ +ß- + antineutrino + E(energy)
The mass remains constant but Z + 1
What are example of pure beta emission and beta-gamma emission?
pure beta = 23P
gamma-beta = 131I
When does alpha decay occur? What is an example?
Large unstable nucleus → emits stable nucleus equiv to He atom
ex: 226Ra
When does electron capture occur? How does it occur?
- too many protons but not enough energy to undergoe positron decay (<1.022 MeV)
- K-skell electron captured by nucleus → proton becomes neutron and neutrino (decreases Z) → electrons down move to K-shell and characteristic x-ray emitted but no particles emmited
- ex: 20181Tl120 → 20180Hg121
When does positron decay (annihilation reaction) occur? What is an example?
- Too many protons and energey > 1.022 MeV
- proton → neutron + ß+ + neurtrino
- positron annihilates with an electron → two 511 keV photons emitted 180 degrees apart
- Z -1
- 189F9 → 188O10 + ß+
When does isomeric conversion occur?
Too much energy, no change in A or Z - associated with metastable species
Ex: 99mTc → 99Tc
What is effective half life?
used to determine how long the radiopharmaceutical will be effective in a particular organ when considering its rate of disappearance from the body, (i.e., biological half-life) and its rate of decay (i.e., physical half-life)
1 = 1 + 1
teff tb tp
what is the effective decay constant?
- leff = lb+lp
(l is supposed to be lambda but no lambda in this program )
What is specific activity?
concentration of radioactivity per unit mass or volume of a pure radionuclide
What is the SI unit of absorbed dose? What is the old unit and how do they relate?
- Gray = J/kg
- 1 Gy = 100 Rad or 1 Rad = 1 cGy