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Published byJacob Crawford Modified over 9 years ago
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Anthony Waker Faculty of Energy Systems and Nuclear Science
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External Exposure The source is external to the body CT Scanner: A few to 10s of mSv per examination
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Internal Exposure The source is inside the body Approximately 1 mSv per year
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Total Exposure is the sum of all external and all internal doses Approximately 3 mSv per year
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Members of the public 1 mSv per year Nuclear Energy Workers 20 mSv per year (100 mSv in 5 years, 50 mSv in any one year) Fukushima workers – legal limit has been raised to 250 mSv Medical Radiation not counted
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External doses Calibrated Instruments and dosimeters Calibrated instruments and dosimeters give a direct reading of the radiation dose to the individual
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Internal Doses Whole body counters and Bioassay Whole body counters and bioassay are used to determine the intake of radioisotopes; what follows is a complicated calculation to convert an intake into a dose.
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Principal Concerns at moderate to low dose (mSv to a few Sv) Cancer Hereditary Disease Radiation Effects on the Fetus The risk increases with dose
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Principal Concerns at high dose (1 Sv and up) Radiation Sickness Bone marrow damage Gastrointestinal damage The severity increases with dose
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Risk to humans derived from Atomic Bomb Survivors (Hiroshima and Nagasaki Life Span Study) Medically exposed groups (ankylosing spondylitis; repeated fluoroscopic examination of tuberculosis patients in Massachusetts and Nova Scotia) Occupationally exposed groups (radium dial- painters, uranium miners, former Soviet Union plutonium workers)
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Current Assessment of Risk Cancer (4 to 10% per Sv) Hereditary Disease (1/10 th of fatal cancer risk) Radiation Effects on the Fetus (life-time cancer risk 20% per Sv)
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Cancer risk estimates apply to populations not to individuals
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Cancer risks attributable to low doses of ionizing radiation: Assessing what we really know PNAS November 25, 2003 vol. 100 no. 24 13761–13766 What is the lowest dose of X-ray or gamma ray radiation for which good evidence exists of increased cancer risk in humans………
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Cancer risks attributable to low doses of ionizing radiation: Assessing what we really know PNAS November 25, 2003 vol. 100 no. 24 13761–13766 ………the epidemiological data suggests that it is approximately 10-50 mSv for an acute exposure and 50–100 mSv for a chronic exposure
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Effects at high dose result from the killing of stem cells that are used to supply replacement cells in the blood and for the lining of the intestines
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External exposures Limit the time of exposure Rotation of workers (shifts) Increase the distance from the source Shielding (put something between you and the source) Fukushima workers will be using all these measures of reducing dose
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Internal exposures Protective clothing and breathing apparatus Prevent spreading contamination by not moving out of contaminated area without changing protective clothing and boots; showers
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Very High Total Exposures Nursing Anti-biotics Blood transfusions Bone marrow transfusions
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External Exposure Distance (exclusion zones and evacuation plans) Internal Exposure Staying out of the plume (exclusion) Staying indoors Preventing spread of contamination Using Potassium Iodide
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