Radiation and Human Health Flashcards
What are calculations of risk posed by irradiation based on?
Type of radiation
Energy the radiation leaves the body
Where in the body it remains
What is absorbed dose a measure of?
How do alpha, beta and gamma energies relate?
Measure of the energy deposited by the radiation in the material that absorbs it.
in Joules/kg
Beta and gamma - Damage to biological tissue is generally proportional to the energy deposited.
Alpha - ionising energy decreases with distance from source.
What does effective dose measure?
Effective dose takes into account that exposure can vary between different tissue types.
Explain Deterministic effects
Radiation has a threshold dose.
Above this, frequency and severity increase with increasing dose.
Explain Stochastic effects
Proportional relationship between radiation does and probability of occurrence.
What is the statistical individual risk of fatal cancer?
5 x 10^-2 Sv-1
e.g., 1 million receive dose of 1Sv. 50,000 will get cancer.
What doses will cause;
- Death within 2 days
- 50% chance of death
- Radiation sickness
- 40Gy
- 4Gy
- 1Gy
What are the three suggested effects of low dose radiation exposure?
- Radiation hormesis - beneficial effects at low dose.
- Linear, no threshold (LNT) - current accepted hypothesis.
- Enhanced risk - low level exposure enhances risk
What is genomic instability?
Colonies of stem cells grown from irradiated parents, expressed generations later.
What is the by-stander effect?
Cells near to irradiated cells exhibit chromosome damage.
What does ionising radiation cause?
Causes non-specific disorganisation or injury of cells and tissues.
What are the two types of radiation damage to chromosomes?
- Indirect damage
- Water molecules ionised (Radiolysis of water)
- Break apart and from OH- radicals
- OH- radical contains unpaired e- which reacts with DNA - Direct damage
- DNA molecule struck by radiation, becomes ionised
- Damaged
What can happened once chromosomes are damaged by radiation?
- Cells can repair themselves if mild damage
- Damage sits inactive until other agents interact with cell
- Damage becomes cancer
- Cells stop functioning and die
What are the most vulnerable cells?
Embryos, lymphatic system, bone marrow
What are the characteristic of Radon? and health effects associated?
Rn-222
- Noble gas, chemically unreactive
- T1/2 = 4 days
- Decay product of U-238
- Alpha and gamma radiation
- Daughters: Pb-210 Po-210
Dangerous levels associated in igneous rocks containing uranium.
Escapes through concentrated void spaces and radon is denser than gas.
Can cause lung caner.