Radiation Basics - Zap & Measure
- Radiation Types (Ionizing - Ejects electrons):
- Particulate: Alpha (α), Beta (β), Neutron (n).
- Electromagnetic (EM): X-rays, Gamma (γ) rays.
- Penetration 📌 (Least → Most): α (paper) < β (plastic/Al) < γ/X-rays (lead).

- Sources:
- Natural: Cosmic, terrestrial (radon, K-40).
- Man-made: Medical (X-rays, CT), industrial, nuclear.
- Units:
- Activity: Becquerel (Bq) (1 dps).
- Exposure (X/γ rays in air): Roentgen (R).
- Absorbed Dose (energy/mass): Gray (Gy) ($J/kg$)
- Equivalent Dose (biological effect): Sievert (Sv) ($H = D \times Q$)
- Effective Dose (overall risk): Sievert (Sv) (sum of tissue-weighted $H$)
⭐ The Sievert (Sv) is the unit of equivalent dose and effective dose, accounting for biological effectiveness of different radiation types.
Cellular Chaos - Dose & Damage
- Mechanisms of Damage:
- Direct: Radiation directly hits & damages DNA.
- Indirect: Radiation ionizes water $\rightarrow$ free radicals (e.g., $OH^\bullet$) $\rightarrow$ DNA damage. (Major pathway)
- Cellular Radiosensitivity (Law of Bergonie & Tribondeau): Cells are more sensitive if:
- High mitotic rate
- Long mitotic future
- Undifferentiated (e.g., hematopoietic, GI lining)
⭐ The Law of Bergonie and Tribondeau states that actively dividing, undifferentiated cells with a long mitotic future are most radiosensitive.
- Deterministic Effects:
- Threshold dose present.
- Severity ↑ with dose (e.g., skin erythema >2 Gy, cataracts >0.5 Gy, sterility).
- Stochastic Effects:
- No threshold (Linear No-Threshold - LNT model).
- Probability ↑ with dose; severity independent (e.g., cancer, genetic effects).

Fallout Ills - Acute & Chronic
Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS): Sequential phases of illness after significant radiation exposure.
, Syndrome Name, Key Features/Symptoms, Onset, and Prognosis/Survival Time)
-
ARS Syndromes by Dose:
- Hematopoietic (Bone Marrow) Syndrome (2-10 Gy): Pancytopenia (nadir 3-4 wks), infection, hemorrhage. Survival dose-dependent.
- Gastrointestinal (GI) Syndrome (10-50 Gy): Mucosal damage (crypt cell death); nausea, vomiting, bloody diarrhea, dehydration, sepsis. Death in 3-14 days.
- Cardiovascular (CV)/Central Nervous System (CNS) Syndrome (>50 Gy): Vasculitis, meningitis, edema; ataxia, seizures, coma. Death in <3 days.
-
Chronic Effects:
- Carcinogenesis: Leukemia (latency 5-7 yrs, excl. CML), thyroid, breast, lung, bone.
- Heritable/Genetic Effects: Mutations (doubling dose concept).
- Teratogenic Effects: Esp. organogenesis (8-15 wks gestation); microcephaly, intellectual disability.
⭐ The most common radiation-induced cancer is leukemia (excluding CML), with a latency period of 5-7 years.
Safety Shields - Guarding Glow
- Principles of Radiation Protection:
- Justification: Ensure benefits outweigh risks.
- Optimization: 📌 ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable).
- Dose Limitation: Adhere to prescribed dose limits.
- Practical Measures (📌 TDS Principle):
- Time: Minimize exposure duration.
- Distance: Maximize distance from source ($I \times d^2 = \text{constant}$).
- Shielding: Use appropriate barriers (e.g., lead for X/gamma, concrete).

- Exposure Limits (AERB/ICRP):
- Occupational: 20 mSv/year (avg. over 5 yrs).
- Public: 1 mSv/year.
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE): Lead aprons, thyroid shields, leaded goggles.
- Dosimetry: TLD badges for individual exposure monitoring.
- Radiation Emergencies: Decontamination, supportive care.
⭐ The ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) principle is a cornerstone of radiation protection, emphasizing optimization of safety measures.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Deterministic effects (e.g., cataracts) have a threshold dose; severity ↑ with dose.
- Stochastic effects (e.g., cancer) have no threshold dose; probability ↑ with dose.
- Human LD50/60 (acute whole-body) is ~3.5-4.5 Gy.
- Most radiosensitive: lymphoid tissue, bone marrow, gonads.
- Most radioresistant: muscle, nerve, mature bone.
- ALARA principle guides radiation safety: As Low As Reasonably Achievable.
- Units: Gray (Gy) (absorbed dose), Sievert (Sv) (equivalent/effective dose).
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