| You are here: HOME > What's New > Chernobyl liquidators' teeth may link radiation dose and disease | PREVIOUS HEADLINES New handbook guides medical decisions in a radiological emergency Dept. of Homeland Security medical experts visit AFRRI Ceremony welcomes new AFRRI director (2010) Unprecedented growth marks AFRRI director's tenure NRC Commissioner tours AFRRI Special assignment: The Vancouver Olympics American Nuclear Society unveils historic-landmark plaque Historic landmark plaque to be installed at defense lab AFRRI receives historic award from American Nuclear Society Iraq researchers tour AFRRI AFRRI awarded nuclear historic landmark status AFRRI leaders, other research reactor experts convene at annual conference Research pioneer touched lives, influenced future of radiation science Former AFRRI scientific director was pioneer in radiation research Researchers share latest radiation-effects findings with military medical community AFRRI scientific director elected to NCRP Scientists deliberate on diagnostics for partial-body irradiation New software to aid treatment decisions during radiation exposure incidents International experts on radiation exposure assessment to convene at AFRRI Ceremony marks change of director at AFRRI (2006) FDA clears 5-AED for human clinical studies New collaboration will develop radiation countermeasures Training for the unthinkable AFRRI employees participate in MASCAL drill EPA awards AFRRI scientists with highest honor DoD commends AFRRI for response to terrorism Ceremony welcomes new AFRRI director (2003) Revised handbook expands casualty management information Peer review validates AFRRI research of measuring radioprotection by liquid chromatography MEIR course available on handy card-size disc AFRRI launches software for radiation casualty management Chernobyl liquidators' teeth may link radiation dose and disease Individual exposure takes heat in radiation study Russian scientists take different path in search for radioprotectors |
||
What's New |
|||
Chernobyl liquidators' teeth may link radiation dose and disease |
|||
![]() |
|||
Photo from "And the Name of the Star is Chornobyl," published by Chornobylinterinform Agency, Chornobyl (used with permission) |
|||
Clues to the levels of radiation exposure that cause disease in humans may be found in the teeth of Chernobyl liquidators, the workers who cleaned up after the 1986 explosion at the nuclear power plant in Ukraine. In research funded by the Armed Forces Radiobiology Research Institute, investigators at the Ukraine Scientific Center of Radiation Medicine made significant progress toward perfecting a technique by which to reconstruct from tooth enamel the radiation dose received; some 135 liquidators participated in the study. While liquidators have developed leukemia, cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other illnesses, the association between these illnesses and their radiation exposure has not yet been proven. If further investigations prove that the electron paramagnetic resonanc (EPR) dosimetry technique is valid, it could be used to refine safety standards and to study the effects of long-term exposure to environmental contamination in other parts of the world. "Although the scope of this study was limited, its results should provide a significant step in improving the utility of EPR in dose reconstruction as well as in getting a clearer picture of the magnitude of the radiation exposure actually received at the world's most tragic reactor acccident," said Dr. Glen I. Reeves, who oversees AFRRI contracts for international collaborations with states of the former Soviet Union. The findings are reported in the AFRRI publication Retrospective Reconstruction of Radiation Doses of Chernobyl Liquidators by Electron Paramagnetic Resonance. The authors, Vadim V. Chumak, Illia A. Likhtarev, Sergey S. Sholom, Larisa F. Pasalskaya, and Yuri V. Pavlenko wrote, "As a result of this effort, EPR dosimetry with teeth was brought to the level of a semiroutine technique for evaluation of doses received by individuals heavily exposed after the Chernobyl accident." Key factors yet to be examined include the effects of medical x rays and of ultraviolet light. (View abstract.) A limited number of copies of the report are available directly from AFRRI, 8901 Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD 20889-5603, USA. Telephone 011-301-295-9228. This and other AFRRI publications are available to qualified users from the Defense Technical Information Center and from university libraries and other libraries associated with the U.S. Government's Depository Library System.
| |||
| TOP OF PAGE | |||

