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  • Radiation re-think

    This has implications from reactor safety zones to the workplace and how we handle radiation exposure in space.



    A new look at prolonged radiation exposure

    A new study from MIT scientists suggests that the guidelines governments use to determine when to evacuate people following a nuclear accident may be too conservative.Â*

    The study, led by Bevin Engelward and Jacquelyn Yanch and published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, found that when mice were exposed to radiation doses about 400 times greater than background levels for five weeks, no DNA damage could be detected.


    Current U.S. regulations require that residents of any area that reaches radiation levels eight times higher than background should be evacuated. However, the financial and emotional cost of such relocation may not be worthwhile, the researchers say.

    “There are no data that say that’s a dangerous level,” says Yanch, a senior lecturer in MIT’s Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering. “This paper shows that you could go 400 times higher than average background levels and you’re still not detecting genetic damage. It could potentially have a big impact on tens if not hundreds of thousands of people in the vicinity of a nuclear powerplant accident or a nuclear bomb detonation, if we figure out just when we should evacuate and when it’s OK to stay where we are.”

    Until now, very few studies have measured the effects of low doses of radiation delivered over a long period of time. This study is the first to measure the genetic damage seen at a level as low as 400 times background (0.0002 centigray per minute, or 105 cGy in a year).

    “Almost all radiation studies are done with one quick hit of radiation. That would cause a totally different biological outcome compared to long-term conditions,” says Engelward, an associate professor of biological engineering at MIT.

    How much is too much?

    Background radiation comes from cosmic radiation and natural radioactive isotopes in the environment. These sources add up to about 0.3 cGy per year per person, on average.

    “Exposure to low-dose-rate radiation is natural, and some people may even say essential for life. The question is, how high does the rate need to get before we need to worry about ill effects on our health?” Yanch says.

    Previous studies have shown that a radiation level of 10.5 cGy, the total dose used in this study, does produce DNA damage if given all at once. However, for this study, the researchers spread the dose out over five weeks, using radioactive iodine as a source. The radiation emitted by the radioactive iodine is similar to that emitted by the damaged Fukushima reactor in Japan.

    At the end of five weeks, the researchers tested for several types of DNA damage, using the most sensitive techniques available. Those types of damage fall into two major classes: base lesions, in which the structure of the DNA base (nucleotide) is altered, and breaks in the DNA strand. They found no significant increases in either type.Â*

    DNA damage occurs spontaneously even at background radiation levels, conservatively at a rate of about 10,000 changes per cell per day. Most of that damage is fixed by DNA repair systems within each cell. The researchers estimate that the amount of radiation used in this study produces an additional dozen lesions per cell per day, all of which appear to have been repaired.

    Though the study ended after five weeks, Engelward believes the results would be the same for longer exposures. “My take on this is that this amount of radiation is not creating very many lesions to begin with, and you already have good DNA repair systems. My guess is that you could probably leave the mice there indefinitely and the damage wouldn’t be significant,” she says.Â*

    Doug Boreham, a professor of medical physics and applied radiation sciences at McMaster University, says the study adds to growing evidence that low doses of radiation are not as harmful as people often fear.

    “Now, it’s believed that all radiation is bad for you, and any time you get a little bit of radiation, it adds up and your risk of cancer goes up,” says Boreham, who was not involved in this study. “There’s now evidence building that that is not the case.”

    Conservative estimates

    Most of the radiation studies on which evacuation guidelines have been based were originally done to establish safe levels for radiation in the workplace, Yanch says — meaning they are very conservative. In workplace cases, this makes sense because the employer can pay for shielding for all of their employees at once, which lowers the cost, she says.

    However, “when you’ve got a contaminated environment, then the source is no longer controlled, and every citizen has to pay for their own dose avoidance,” Yanch says. “They have to leave their home or their community, maybe even forever. They often lose their jobs, like you saw in Fukushima. And there you really want to call into question how conservative in your analysis of the radiation effect you want to be. Instead of being conservative, it makes more sense to look at a best estimate of how hazardous radiation really is.”

    Those conservative estimates are based on acute radiation exposures, and then extrapolating what might happen at lower doses and lower dose-rates, Engelward says. “Basically you’re using a data set collected based on an acute high dose exposure to make predictions about what’s happening at very low doses over a long period of time, and you don’t really have any direct data. It’s guesswork,” she says. “People argue constantly about how to predict what is happening at lower doses and lower dose-rates.”

    However, the researchers say that more studies are needed before evacuation guidelines can be revised.Â*

    “Clearly these studies had to be done in animals rather than people, but many studies show that mice and humans share similar responses to radiation. This work therefore provides a framework for additional research and careful evaluation of our current guidelines,” Engelward says.

    “It is interesting that, despite the evacuation of roughly 100,000 residents, the Japanese government was criticized for not imposing evacuations for even more people. From our studies, we would predict that the population that was left behind would not show excess DNA damage — this is something we can test using technologies recently developed in our laboratory,” she adds.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Several studies have been made on the epidemiology of cancer in places with high natural background radiation. Aberdeen (Scotland) has been called the Silver City because it is built on a bedrock of a granite with light crystals, which was also used to build much of the city centre and even used as ashlar over brick for less important buildings. The natural radiation from this granite is such that inhabitants receive typical doses of 3-4 times the normal levels. The incidence of any form of cancer has not been statistically higher than elsewhere and some types may have been lower, although the probability of the latter is low. Many experts believe, but it is still unproven, that there is a threshold level, below which there is no danger. Unfortunately, the threshold level may vary in individuals and the Aberdonians may have high thresholds because their families have lived in the region for generations. There are too many confounding factors to draw definitive conclusions.

    The Japanese had a knee-jerk reaction to Fukushima and their 'exclusion zones' were based on the radius from the plant and had nothing to do with measured radiation levels. IMHO, this caused unnecessary hardship to some who were evacuated without real cause, yet others were allowed to stay in places outside the zone where radiation was marginally high.

    In England, the Windscale reactor fire resulted in milk from cows in the region with a high level of (IIRC) strontium isotopes was dumped. There was a scare that there was a high incidence of leukaemia in children in the area (there was no evacuation) over the following decades, but there was no statistical probability of higher rates, compared with other similar regions which were unaffected from the fallout. The real problem was mainly tabloid newspapers exaggerating the incidence of the odd case, adding 2+2 and making 8. At the time, I was working for a company supplying instruments to the plant (no, it was not ours that caused the graphite moderator to catch fire!!!) and I was working close to the reactor there, just two weeks after the incident. The only precaution I was subjected to was I had to wear a film badge. Off-topic, the hotel I was staying in was at Seascale, just south of Windscale, and one night I was scared s==tless by the strongest gale I've ever experienced; the whole stone-built building was rocking in the wind and the nearby village of Gosforth didn't have an intact roof.
    Brian (the devil incarnate)

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    • #3
      IIRC Windscale's strontium was strontium-90.

      This has been long suspected but by and large the presumptions of the graybeards were accepted, and even after detailed DNA analysis became possible not much was done until relatively recently. This plus the recent discovery of drugs that can treat radiation sickness (to be tried in therapy patients next) makes for a big rethink on doses for therapy, shielding for space travel etc.
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

      Comment


      • #4
        Here is a documentary on Windscale fire:
        Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


        Brian, what's your take on it?

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        • #5
          Originally posted by UtwigMU View Post
          Here is a documentary on Windscale fire:
          Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


          Brian, what's your take on it?
          Wow! Quite a document! It certainly took me back to my days as a callow 25-year-old youth! I would say that, as far as I can judge, with a failing 80-year-old memory, if you extract the journalese from it, especially the old newsreel passages, the rest is fairly accurate. The idea of pumping vast quantities of air through burning carbon to "cool it" was, of course ludicrous and I do remember that it was a subject of bitter polemic that the scientists had not foreseen it. There was an ironworker there and I recall, in the canteen, he stated loud and clear in very florid language that in his smithy he had a ventilator that blew air through incandescent carbon and he could show the f***ing bl**dy boffins what happens, at any time!

          My work involved a level measuring device of the captured dust in the electrostatic precipitator bin at the bottom of the famous chimney. I had joined my employer in September 1957 and I guess I was there in early-to-mid November. It is possible I was exposed to radioactive dust but my films never came up with over-exposure. Of course, I never saw the Windscale "pile"

          Interestingly, AFAIK, this reactor was the only side-loading one. Even at Calder Hall, for which we supplied temperature meters and recorders, the fuel was loaded from the top, but it was not graphite-moderated. This had the advantage of fail-safe as gravity would drop the fuel rods (much longer and thinner than the Windscale ones) in case of an emergency.

          One point, and I'm on thin ice here, is that I think the tritium came from Calder Hall, rather than Windscale.

          I loved the bit about electricity being so cheap that it wouldn't be worth metering it.

          Overall, it took me back so many years and I remember the relative amateurish DIY outlook of the staff there; they were a throwback to the wartime "boffins" many of whom had their own very narrow outlook from a speciality and communications were often difficult across the divide between the disciplines, but they were often good fun.
          Brian (the devil incarnate)

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