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Radiation as a Weapon of Terror

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Title: Radiation as a Weapon of Terror


1
Radiation as a Weapon of Terror
2
Acknowledgements
  • South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium
    (AHEC)
  • Funded by the Health Resources and Services
    Administration.
  • Grant number 1T01HP01418-01-00
  • P.I. David Garr, MD, Executive Director AHEC
  • BT Project Director Beth Kennedy, Associate
    Program Director AHEC
  • Core Team
  • BT Co-director Ralph Shealy, MD
  • BT Project Manager Deborah Stier Carson, PharmD
  • BT CME Director William Simpson, MD
  • IT Coordinator Liz Riccardone, MHS
  • Web Master Mary Mauldin, PhD
  • P.R Coordinator Nicole Brundage, MHA
  • Evaluation Specialist Yvonne Michel, PhD
  • Financial Director Donald Tyner, MBA

3
Acknowledgment
  • This material has been prepared for SC AHEC
    Bioterrorism Training Networkby
  • Ralph M. Shealy, M.D., FACEPCo-Director of SC
    AHEC Bioterrorism Training Network
  • Medical Director for Operations, Charleston
    County EMS
  • Medical Director, Charleston County Rescue Squad

4
Objectives 1
  • At the conclusion of this presentation, the
    participant will
  • List five radiological/nuclear threats
  • Identify three effects of a radiological incident
    on the community
  • Describe the availability of, and the threat
    posed by, radiological materials on the
    international black market
  • Define ionizing radiation and radioactive
    contamination.

5
Objectives 2
  • State the four basic types of ionizing radiation.
  • State the potential biological effect from acute
    radiation exposure
  • Identify the protective measures of time
    distance, and shielding.
  • List the five possible health effects from
    ionizing radiation exposure

6
Objectives 3
  • List materials that are most effective in
    shielding alpha, beta, gamma, and neutron
    radiation.
  • List five sources that can be used as a
    radiological dispersion device
  • List five dispersal techniques

7
Effects of a Radiological Incident
  • Panic.
  • Mass casualties with difficult injuries.
  • Medical facilities overloaded.
  • Contamination issues.
  • Gridlock.
  • Public services disrupted.

8
A True Story
  • Boy Scout builds working nuclear breeder
    reactor from readily available materials!

9
Ingredients
  • Radium-226 from antique clocks with luminous
    radium dials.
  • Americium-241 from smoke detectors.
  • Beryllium-9 stolen from a local college.
  • Thorium-232 collected from Coleman gas lantern
    mantles.

10
  • The reactor became significantly more
    radioactive within a matter of weeks as it
    produced Uranium-233.
  • When he could detect the radiation from 5 doors
    down, he terminated the experiment.
  • The EPA stated that the 40,000 nearby residents
    could have been put at risk had radioactive dust
    been accidentally liberated.

11
Radiation
  • Energy that comes from a source and travels
    through some material or through space.
  • Light, heat, and sound are types of radiation
  • Types of radiation associated with radioactivity
    are alpha and beta particles and gamma and
    x-rays.

12
Radiation Released When a Radioactive Atom Decays
  • Alpha particles
  • Beta particles
  • Gamma rays and x-rays
  • Neutron radiation

13
Alpha Particles
  • Helium nucleus
  • Contain two protons and two neutrons.
  • Have strong positive charge
  • Is a large particle
  • Will travel only a few inches in air
  • Will not penetrate paper or dead skin
  • Only dangerous when incorporated in the body by
    ingestion, inhalation or through a wound.

14
Beta Particles
  • Very small particle
  • Carry a negative charge
  • Actually an electron traveling at very high speed
  • A high-energy beta particle can travel about ten
    feet in air and can penetrate paper and human
    skin
  • Can be shielded by plastic, glass, and metal foil

15
Gamma Rays and X-rays
  • Pure energy photons and not particles
  • No mass or electrical charge
  • Travel at the speed of light
  • Very short wavelength
  • Can penetrate and damage all organs
  • Shielded by lead, steel, and concrete

16
Neutron Radiation
  • Neutron radiation is a high speed neutron
    particle
  • Have no electrical charge
  • Neutrons ionize matter by direct collision with
    electrons.
  • Shielded by carbon, lithium, cadmium, boron,
    plastic, and water

17
Background Radiation
  • Sources of normal background radiation are
  • Cosmic radiation
  • Sources in the earths crust
  • Sources deposited in the body from food and water
  • Naturally occurring radon in the soil

18
Manmade Sources of Background Radiation
  • Tobacco products contain radon absorbed by the
    plant leaf.
  • Medical radiation from x-rays, nuclear medicine
    diagnostics, and radiation therapy.
  • Building materials contain terrestrial radiation
    sources.
  • Water supply contains dissolved radioactive
    minerals

19
Sources of Radioactive Isotopes
  • Natural sources
  • Radon in air
  • Radium in soil
  • Uranium ore
  • Machine produced nuclear interactions
  • Cyclotrons
  • Linear accelerators
  • Nuclear reactors

20
Moral of the Boy Scout Story
  • Intelligent people with enough determination can
    build sophisticated nuclear devices using readily
    available materials and information that can be
    collected from sources accessible to the public.

21
Nuclear Expertise Can be Bought
  • Thousands of former Soviet weapons scientists
    have not successfully found suitable new jobs in
    the civilian economy and are currently
    impoverished.

22
Radioactive Materials Can Be Bought
  • Russia currently has no consolidated system of
    nuclear materials registration and it is very
    difficult to track the quantity, deployment, and
    transportation of nuclear material.

23
Nuclear Black Market
  • Weapons grade nuclear materials are located in
    nearly 100 facilities in the former Soviet Union.
  • The black market for radioactive materials is
    very active in Russia since 1993.
  • The United Nations Atomic Energy Agency has
    documented 370 confirmed incidents of nuclear
    trafficking between 1993 and 2001.

24
Nuclear Black Market
  • Reactor wastes are the ideal material for
    terrorists to use in radiation dispersal devices
    (dirty bombs).

25
Nuclear Black Market
  • Security at nuclear plants and storage facilities
    in the former Soviet Union is lax.
  • Facilities are in dilapidated condition.
  • There is much evidence of an active and lucrative
    trade in radioactive materials in a country in
    deep economic decline.

26
Nuclear Black Market
  • Most intense around and inside nuclear plants in
    the former Soviet Union.
  • Fifteen kilograms of commercial grade uranium
    were found under the bathtub of one plant
    employee.
  • In Moscow in 1995, enriched uranium was found
    inside a cabinet secured with a bicycle lock.

27
Suitcase Bombs
  • A Russian Lieutenant General testified in 1998
    that ninety suit-case sized one kiloton atomic
    bombs were unaccounted for.
  • We know that this weapon is feasible, since we
    built them in the 1960s.

28
Nuclear Power Plants
  • High and low level wastes are the byproducts of
    electricity production at nuclear power plants.
  • Terrorists could use these to contaminate an area
    so that it could not be accessed or used safely.
  • Many engineering safeguards at a nuclear power
    plant are disabled during a Shut Down. The
    reactor is most vulnerable to attack at that time.

29
Radiological Dispersal Device(Dirty Bomb)
  • A radioactive Dispersal Device spreads
    radioactive contamination over an area.
  • Radioactive material can be acquired from
    numerous unsecured locations.
  • Radiographic, industrial, medical, agricultural,
    defense wastes, reactor waste.
  • The radioactive material can be easily dispersed
    with a conventional explosive.

30
Contamination
  • Deposition of radioactive material in any place
    where it is not desired, particularly where its
    presence can be harmful.

31
Avoiding Contamination
  • Use respirator early
  • Use time, distance, and shielding effectively
  • Removal of outer garments removes most
    radiological contamination.
  • Soap and water remove most of the rest.
  • Do not eat, drink, smoke, scratch, apply make-up
    or rub your eyes in a contaminated environment.
  • Avoid cuts and abrasions.

32
Irradiated versus Contaminated
  • A patient who has been exposed to ionizing
    radiation has been injured by the exposure but
    does not emit radiation himself. There is no
    ongoing source of radiation injury.
  • A patient who has be contaminated with
    radiation-emitting materials continues to be
    injured by them and posses a threat to others.

33
Critical Point for Health Providers
  • It is impossible for a living patient to be so
    contaminated as to pose a threat to care
    providers.
  • (Medical Management of Radiological Casualties,
    December, 1999, P. 67.)

34
ALARA
  • Minimize exposure to radiation and contamination.
  • Keep exposure As Low as Reasonably Achievable
  • Time Distance Shielding

35
Time Practical Pearls
  • Break task into many small segment.
  • A different individual performs each small
    segment.
  • Time of exposure is minimized.
  • Total radiation dose is minimized

36
Practical Distance Pearls
  • The Inverse Square Law
  • Doubling the distance from a source halves the
    radiation dose
  • Halving the distance from a source increases the
    dose four times!
  • Distancing oneself from a source by even a small
    amount will significantly decrease ones radiation
    exposure.

37
Practical Shielding Pearls
  • Four to twelve inches of soil used to cover a
    discrete radiation source will stop 50 to 90 of
    the radiation!
  • An engine block, a concrete wall, or an earthen
    berm can be adequate shielding if kept between a
    rescuer and the source.

38
Ionizing Radiation
  • Ionizing radiation interacts with the atoms in
    tissue and causes cellular damage.

39
External Exposure
  • Like an x-ray the source of radiation is remote
    from the person.
  • The person is NOT radioactive.
  • The person is NOT a threat to others.

40
Internal Exposure
  • The most serious chronic risk.
  • Inhaled radioactive particles in the air.
  • Ingested contaminated food or water.
  • Absorbed material through the skin or mucous
    membranes.
  • Incorporated contaminants in a wound.

41
Health Effects
  • Ionizing radiation damages cells by interacting
    with its atoms.
  • The nucleus is especially sensitive.
  • Even low dose radiation effects chromosomes.
  • Chromosome damage may result in mutations,
    possibly resulting in malignancies or fetal
    abnormalities.

42
Health Effects
  • Ionization of cellular water produces hydrogen
    peroxide.
  • Intercellular hydrogen is very toxic and more
    destructive than the radiation itself.
  • Hydrogen peroxide is more destructive than the
    radiation itself.

43
Health EffectsRadiation Sensitivity of Different
Cells
MOST Sensitive
  • Developing sperm cells
  • White blood cells
  • Red blood cells
  • Small intestine
  • Stomach
  • Neural tissue (nerves, spinal cord, brain)
  • Colon
  • Skin
  • Muscle
  • Bone
  • Collagen

LEAST Sensitive
44
Whole Body Effects
  • High dose radiation over a short period of time
    produces acute health complications.
  • Low doses of radiation over an extended period of
    time may produce chronic health complications

45
Acute Radiation Syndrome
  • Prodromal Stage
  • Latent Stage
  • Manifest Illness
  • Recovery or Death

46
Acute Radiation Syndrome
  • Low dose ( up to 100,000 millirem)
  • Moderate dose (100,000 to 1,000,000 millirem)
  • High dose (greater than 1,000,000 millirem)
  • LD50 is about 300,000 to 500,000, depending on
    the extent of medical care.

47
Drug Intervention for Acute Thyroid Exposure
  • Iodine concentrates in thyroid.
  • Radioiodine enters by inhalation and ingestion.
  • Normal iodine will saturate the gland so that
    radioiodine cannot be absorbed.
  • Potassium iodide (KI) is effective if taken
    before exposure.
  • KI does not protect against any other isotope.

48
Chronic Radiation Exposure
  • Somatic Effects
  • Genetic Effects
  • In-Utero Effects

49
Lifetime Increased Cancer Risk
  • Stomach
  • Lung
  • Liver
  • Colon
  • Bladder
  • Breast
  • Ovaries
  • Thyroid
  • Skin
  • Bone marrow

50
Summary
  • Radiation can be an effective terrorist weapon.
  • It is possible to sabotage sources of radiation
    in the community or even to construct
    radiological weapons of various types.
  • Sources of expertise and materials are available.
  • Health professionals can take steps to protect
    themselves while providing care to victims of a
    radiological attack.

51
Acknowledgement
  • This presentation borrows heavily from
  • The Weapons of Mass Destruction
    Radiation/Nuclear Course for Hazardous Materials
    Technicians produced by the U.S. Department of
    Justice Office for Domestic Preparedness, the
    U.S. Department of Energy, and Bechtel Nevada.
  • Emergency Medicine, Fourth Edition, produced by
    the American College of Emergency Physicians and
    edited by Judith Tintinalli, M.D.

52
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