United States
                          Environmental Protection
                          Agency
Air And
Radiation
(ANR-459)
June 1991
&EPA             Ionizing  Radiation  Series      No. 2
                          Health  Effects  From  Exposure
                          To  Ionizing Radiation
                         Ionizing radiation can cause changes in the
                         chemical  balance of cells.  Some of those
                         changes can result in cancer.  In addition, by
                         damaging  the  genetic  material  (DNA)
                         contained in all cells of  the body,  ionizing
                         radiation can cause harmful genetic mutations
                         that can be passed on to  future generations.
                         Exposure to large amounts of radiation, a rare
                         occurrence, can cause sickness in a few hours
                         or days and death within 60 days of exposure.
                         In extreme cases, it can cause death within a
                         few hours of exposure.

                          Sources of Exposure

                         The ionizing radiations of primary concern are
                         alpha and beta particles, gamma rays, and x
                         rays. Alpha and beta particles and gamma rays
                         can come from natural sources or can  be
                         technologically produced.  Most of the x-ray
                         exposure  people receive  is  technologically
                         produced.   Natural radiation comes from
                         cosmic rays, naturally  occurring  radioactive
                         elements found in the earth's crust (uranium,
                         thorium, etc.), and radioactive decay products
                         such  as  radon  and  its  subsequent  decay
                         products.   The  latter, group  represents the
                         majority  of  xie radiation exposure  of the
                         general public.

                         In additon to these natural sources, radiation
                         can come from such wide-ranging  sources as
                         hospitals, research institutions, nuclear reactors
                         and  their  support  facilities,  certain
                         manufacturing processes, and Federal facilities
                         involved in nuclear weapons production. The
                         figure  on  page 2  shows  the  percentage
                         contribution  that various radiation  sources
                         make toward the yearly average effective dose
                         received by the U.S. population (NCRP Report
                         No. 93).
                Any release of radioactive material is a
                potential source of radiation exposure to
                the population.  In  addition to exposure
                from external  sources, radiation exposure
                can occur internally by ingesting, inhaling,
                injecting, or absorbing radioactive materials.
                Both external and internal sources may
                irradiate the whole body or a portion of the
                body. Tilie amount of radiation exposure is
                usually expressed in a unit called millirem
                (mrem).; In the United States, the average
                person iis  exposed to an effective dose
                equivalent  of approximately 360 mrem
                (whole-body exposure) per year from  all
                sources (JNCRP Report No. 93).

                 Result:; of Exposure

                Ionizing  radiation  affects  people   by
                depositing energy in body tissue, which can
                cause cell damage or cell death. In some
                cases there may be no effect.   In other
                cases, the  cell may survive but  become
                abnormal,  either   temporarily   or
                permanently, or an abnormal cell may
                become malignant.    Large  doses  of
                radiation   can  cause  extensive  cellular
                damage and result hi death. With smaller
                doses, the  person or particular irradiated
                organ(s) may  survive, but the cells  are
                damaged!; increasing the chance of cancer.
                The extent of the damage depends upon
                the total amount of energy absorbed, the
                tune period and dose rate of exposure, and
                the particular organ(s) exposed.

                Evidence; of injury from low or moderate
                doses of radiation may not show up for
                months or  even years.  For leukemia, the
                minimum   time  period  between the
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radiation exposure and the appearance of disease
(latency period) is 2 years.  For solid tumors, the
latency period is more than 5 years. The types of
effects and their  probability of  occurrence  can
depend on whether the exposure occurs over a large
part of a person's lifespan (chronic) or during a very
short portion of the lifespan  (acute).  It should be
noted that all of the health effects of exposure to
radiation can also occur in unexposed people due to
other causes. Also, there is no detectable difference
in appearance between radiation  induced cancers
and genetic effects and those due to other causes.

 Chronic Exposure

Chronic exposure  is  continuous  or intermittent
exposure  to low levels of radiation over a long
period of time. Chronic exposure is considered to
produce only effects that can be  observed  some
time following initial  exposure.   These include
genetic effects  and  other effects  such as cancer,
precancerous lesions, benign  tumors, cataracts, skin
 changes, and congenital defects.

 Acute Exposure

 Acute exposure is exposure  to a large, single dose
 of radiation, or a series of doses, for a short period
 of time.    Large  acute  doses  can  result from
 accidental or emergency exposures or from special
 medical procedures (radiation therapy).   In most
 cases, a large acute exposure to radiation  can cause
 both immediate and delayed effects.  For humans
 and  other mammals, acute exposure,   if large
 enough, can cause rapid  development of radiation
 sickness,   evidenced by gastrointestinal disorders,
 bacterial infections, hemorrhaging, anemia, loss of
 body fluids,  and  electrolyte imbalance.   Delayed
 biological effects can include cataracts, temporary
 sterility, cancer, and genetic effects. Extremely high
 levels of acute radiation exposure  can  result in
 death within  a few hours, days or weeks.

 Risks of Health Effects

 All people are chronically exposed to background
 levels of radiation  present in the environment.
 Many people also   receive  additional  chronic
 exposures and/or relatively small acute exposures.
 For  populations  receiving  such exposures,  the
 primary concern is that radiation could increase the
 risk of cancers or harmful genetic effects.
The probability of a radiation-caused cancer or
genetic effect is  related to the  total amount of
radiation accumulated by an individual. Based on
current scientific evidence;, any exposure to radiation
can be harmful (or can increase the risk of cancer);
however,  at very low  exposures, the estimated
increases in risk  are very small.  For this reason,
cancer rates in populations receiving very low doses
of radiation may  not show increases  over the rates
for unexposed populations.

For information  on  ejEfects  at high  levels of
exposure,   scientists   largely   depend   on
epidemiological data  on survivors of the Japanese
atomic bomb explosions and  on people receiving
large doses  of radiation medically.   These  data
demonstrate a higher incidence  of  cancer  among
exposed individuals and! a  greater  probability of
cancer as the level of ejcposure increases.  In the
absence of more direct information, that data is also
used to estimate  what the effects could be at lower
exposures.  Where questions arise, scientists try to
extrapolate based  on iiiformatiqn obtained from
laboratory experiments, but these extrapolations are
acknowledged  to be only estimates.  For radon,
scientists largely depemd  on data  collected on
underground miners. Professionals in the radiation
protection field prudently assume that the chance of
a fatal cancer from radiation exposure increases in
proportion  to  the magnitude  of the exposure and
that the risk is as high for chronic exposure as it is
for acute exposure.  In bther words, it is assumed
 that no radiation exposure is completely risk free.

 Suggested Reading

 The following  books are; possible sources for more
 in-depth information  on  the  health  effects of
 radiation exposure.     :

 Cancer - Volume I. Frederick F. Becker, Editor,
 Plenum Press  - 1975,

 Radiation  Protection  •• Second Edition.  Jacob
 Shapiro, Harvard University Press - 1981.

 Atoms. Radiation, and Radiation Protection. James
 E. Turner, Pergamon Press 1986.

 Ionizing Radiation Exposure of the Population of
 the  United States-    (NCRP  Report  No.  931.
 National  Council on JRadiation Protection and
 Measurements (NCRP)!- 1987.

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