Sunday, September 13, 2009

Scientists find direct link between CT scan and cellular damage

S & T » Science
August 18, 2009
Scientists find direct link between CT scan and cellular damage
K. S. Parthasarathy




A new research paper shows that radiation doses over time were less damaging than a single dose delivered all at once. In this 2005-file photo, a patient undergoing a test on computed tomography multi-detector 16 slice scanner at a hospital in India. Photo: K. R. Deepak.
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science and technology science (general)
health
X-rays induce many types of lesions (tiny biological damage) in the tissues through which they pass. They include breaks of one strand or both strands of the cellular DNA. Cells repair most of the former lesions promptly. Double Strand Break (DSB) is probably the most important effect. Scientists have developed extremely sensitive methods to assay DSBs caused by a single computed tomography (CT) test.
Cell repair
Cells can either repair DSBs properly restoring overall integrity of the genome, or mis-repair, resulting in drastic consequences such as cancer.
Kufner, Schwab and colleagues, researchers from Germany, described a method to measure biological dose in computed tomography (CT) scanning procedures (European Congress of Radiology, 2009). They demonstrated Double Strand Breaks (DSBs) of DNA in the white blood cells of patients undergoing cardiac CT and angiography examinations by sampling blood from the patients before and after the tests.
Physical energy absorbed by tissue is an imperfect indicator of what goes on in the tissue. A true estimate of radiation risk requires an accurate, reproducible biological measurement of radiation-induced damage, (auntminnie.com, 2009). By counting the DSBs, the researchers measured such a biological quantity.
Assay method
Radiation exposure causes DSBs in mammalian cells. When cells are exposed to radiation, certain types of molecules called histone H2AX, adjacent to the nascent breaks, undergo “phosphorylation” (a process involving specific biochemical changes).
The response is highly amplified and rapid; hundreds to thousands of H2AX molecules join within minutes. This newly phosphorylated protein called gamma-H2AX mobilises DNA repair proteins and form discrete foci, one per DSB. Specialists count these biomarkers by using immuno-fluorescence microscopy.
Counting of DSBs is thousand times more sensitive than other biological methods such as counting of chromosome aberrations.
A dose of one mGy (typical skin dose in medical x-ray examinations) generates on average one track per nucleus and thus is considered the lowest dose that can affect a whole cell. With one mGy, nearly 3 per cent of irradiated cells can sustain a DNA DSB. (Bonner, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, April 23, 2003)
Medical X–ray procedures
Researchers examined 32 patients, 16 on each of two CT scanners using various protocols. They collected blood samples before and 30 minutes after the CT scan and counted the DSBs formed. They found that the number of DSBs increased linearly with dose length product, a normally used physical parameter
They observed that sequential CT scans are less biologically damaging than spiral CT. Radiation dose delivered over time was less damaging than the same dose delivered all at once. They did not observe any abnormal DNA damage in the blood cells of interventional radiologists when measured repeatedly throughout the normal working day.
The researchers demonstrated the presence of DSBs in the blood cells of all 37 patients undergoing conventional angiography. The number of DSBs at the end of the procedure varied widely, declining rapidly after the examinations due to DSB repair processes.
The sensitive methods evolved by the researchers may be very useful in understanding the mechanisms of cellular damage. It may help to evolve better cancer treatment strategies. Cancer cells are rogue cells with no rules. If they have any rules they are their own rules!
CT, a unique tool
The findings referred to in this article indicate the unparalleled technological advances in the study of cells and do not in any way diminish the potential use of computed tomography or conventional angiography in clinically indicated instances. CT scan unit is a unique tool to diagnose disease, trauma or abnormality and to plan, guide and monitor treatment.
It will cause harm to the patient if he refuses CT examinations prescribed by a qualified physician. For such tests, the benefit far outweighs the possible harm. Technological revolutions should not skew perception of risks.
(The author is a Former Secretary, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, India. He can be contacted at: ksparth@yahoo.co.uk )
Keywords: CT Scan, DNA, K.S. Parthasarathy, Radiation,
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Printable version | Aug 22, 2009 8:24:48 AM | http://beta.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/article4850.ece

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Interview with Profesor Roger Clarke, Chairman, International Commission on Radiological Protection

EXTRACT OF THE INTERVIEW GIVEN BY Prof. Roger Clarke, chairman, International Commission on Radiological protection to Dr. K.S. Parthasarathy, Secretary, AERB during his visit to India to participate in the International Conference on Medical Physics and the XIXth annual Conference of Association of Medical Physicists of India

( Published in the AERB Newsletter)

Dr. KSP : I remember that it is not your first visit to India

Prof. Roger Clarke : I cam to India a few years ago. But I am attending the Medical Physics Conference for the first time.

KSP : In your last visit you addressed the officers of the Atomic energy Regulatory Board (AERB).

RC : I know a few colleagues from India who worked with me in the Committees of the International Commission on Radiological protection.

KSP: How did you get into the field of radiological protection? What was the incentive to enter this field? The career of a radiation physicist may not have been lucrative. Is it not?

RC : I was a reactor physicist working for the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB). One day my head of Division came to me. He wanted an answer for the question, with how many failed fuel plus pins you can operate an Advanced Gas Cooled Reactor (AGCR). It was in the Sixties. AGCR fuel was more expensive. Primarily the emphasis was on the basis of those to the public. I collected relevant data. In the process, I calculated the inventory of the fission products. I got introduced to health physics. I did some environmental modeling, got interest in radiobiology. Later I joined the National Radiological Protection Board to establish close assessment capability after gathering inputs on the environmental concentration of radionuclide. There was a group working on the movement of radionuclide in the biosphere. This was 20 years ago. This group was primarily interested in the study of radiation doses due to releases of radionuclide.

KSP: Historically, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) was setup to make recommendations on the safe use of ionizing radiation in medicine. But it took a few decades for ICRP to bring out comprehensive recommendations on the protection of patients in diagnostic radiology. What was the reasons for this? Was it because ICRP did not want any control on medical radiation proactive?

RC : In the early years, therapeutic treatment was given more emphasis. The forerunner of the ICRP originated from the recommendations of the British X-ray and Radium Protection Committee. Then the major concern was protection of the workers. This was because deterministic effects such as extensive skin damage was seen among the x-ray workers who handled x-ray units. After the Second World War more penetrating radiations came to be used in medicine. Artificial radioisotopes appeared on the scene. More and More public were exposed. The emphasis shifted to public exposure. It coincided with more developments in fifties the emphasis was on therapy. Later more and more diagnostic technologies were developed.

KSP: Is it true that after the Second World War, many technically qualified people entered the job market. Many of them were electrical engineers. Apparently, this gave a boost to the development of newer technologies, which included manufacture of x-ray generations of higher and higher voltages.
RC : That is true. Radiation generators emitting more penetrating radiation began to appear in medical practice. Leukemia was identified among medical practitioners. The work by an American Physician Mr. Shields Warren is notable. He reported that Leukemia among radiologists was higher than that among general medical practitioners. It was obvious that ICRP, in this background, started giving more emphasis to patient protection. I would like to mention one recent development. Deterministic effects are coming out into focus now. Some of the interventional procedure, if carried out without care, can give substantial does to patients.

KSP: So it is not true that ICRP was somewhat biased in favour of radiologists over the years. What was the type of representation radiologists had in the ICRP?

RC: That ICRP charter states that only one radiologist need be there in ICRP though it was set up by the International Congress of Radiology – a professional association of radiologist – It is often not known that there are two more organizations to be considered, the International Commission on Radiation Units (ICRUs) and the International Committee for Education in Radiation and Radiology. The latter organization was established a few years back, but was not very active. It was re-established around five years back.

KSP: What are the new concerns?

RC: The concern of the radiologists shifted to finding out what is a better image. Future is in imaging, in medical imaging. For instance, digital imaging in interventional radiology, electronic manipulation of images, fluoroscopy with computer software. These technologies are likely to appear. More and more computer will start controlling x-ray imaging. Surgeons will turn round and expect computers to control the imaging procedure. With the newer techniques being used a dose reduction of a factor of about 10 is possible to the patient. The workers are also benefited by the dose reduction.



KSP: Do you agree that the scholarly discussion on the Linear-Non Threshold (L-NT)hypothesis has contributed to the notion that there is no safe level of radiation. Has it not sensitized the large public to greater and unreasonable levels?.

RC : I agree. When experts disagree, the credibility of specialists suffers. If experts do not agree, how can people decide which side of the argument is believable? I cannot deny that the arguments on L-NT has created some difficulties. The situation could be bad because there is an increasing possibility that decisions in science may be made by judges and juries in court rooms and not by professional association or by Royal Societies. The judiciary system may not be able to convince itself about the increased possibilities of radiation effects.
KSP: Don’t you thing that it is futile to try to get a deterministic answer to a purely probabilistic question?

RC: Yes. But I do not understand why some people wanted to establish that there is a threshold does below which there will not be any radiation effect. One of the major difficulties is in tackling the problem of old contaminated sites. Small radiation doses due to residual radio activities left behind at certain sites an cause very tiny amount of radiation doses. But when these doses are integrated over several thousand years. One may end up with getting significant amount of doses. We ill be left with the estimates of a few hundreds of probable deaths due to these collective doses accumulated over a long period of time. But I believe that we must have started dialogue on acceptable risks.

KSP : I am sure we must exclude voluntary risks such as risk due to smoking while we consider acceptable risks.

RC : Yes, I agree. Only involuntary risks are to be considered. In general, I am worried that the philosophy of protection has become somewhat complex.

KSP :Even for the professional ……..


RC : You said that and I agree. We must develop simpler concepts. ICRP must start consultations with other groups and collect ideas for reviewing and consolidating the system of protection. We have started to do that already. It explains why some of our recent documents are better than earlier ones. Consultation with others will help to improve the documents. The document on radon is an instance in point.

KSP: Everyone was keen on the on-going L-NT controversy. While the ICRP and the NRPB supported the argument that there is no threshold for the effects of ionizing radiation, the US Health Physics Society was unconvinced. The NRPB bulletin went to town with the suggestion that the attitude of the Health Physics Society is in tune with the liberalized attitude of US Administration to nuclear power. Can you comment on this development?

RC : Yes, certainly different professional groups looked at this issue very differently. American Health Physics Society has its own stated view. I have been to Health Physicists Society. Lots of people were interested in the controversy. The arguments put forth by the Health Physics Society are outdated with respect to the recent findings on the Japanese survivors of the atomic weapons. They did not then have the occasion to see the data. The recent data indicated that there could be significant risk at doses as low as 50 mSv, of course with much uncertainty. I do not still understand why they are looking for a threshold. There are many unknown cellular phenomena to be understood. Genomic instability, for instance.

KSP: You have become an unquestionable proponent of the linear non threshold theory. Certainly you didn’t ask for such a position. Do you really think that this controversy when uncontrolled?

RC: Yes. In my view, there is no need to search for a threshold. Nobody denies that there is evidence for the repair of cellular damage. But we cannot ignore that the repair mechanisms are also statistical in nature.

KSP: Biological effects of radiation has been studied for the past 100 years. The stochastic effects such as cancer world not have even been through about, but for the long an expensive epidemiological studies. Is it not unfair to spend too much of resources, in fact, vast sums of money to carry out studies about an agent which is now known to be much less hazardous than hundreds of toxic chemicals about which practically nothing is known.

RC: I may say that physicists should take the blame for it. The study of nuclear physics progressed rapidly. Some of the best brains entered the profession. The study of physics was intellectually satisfying and scientifically stimulating. Unfortunately, the same was not true for chemicals. Of late, biologists are also stating to use more and more mathematical formulations. Probably natural sciences are getting ready to make quantitative estimate.

The biggest injustice done is to attach a speaker to a Geiger counter, You must remember that nobody attaches a speaker to a gas chromatograph. In case higher values of hazardous chemicals are detected, the speaker howling is more dramatic and will definitely arrest the attention and create a problem.

There are several aspects to the understanding of the risks from chemical compared to the risks from chemical radiation. Natural radiation is present everywhere. There is no such analogue in the case of hazardous chemicals. Releasing genetically modified plants without control is probably in my view a higher problem. No doubt of course, this area getting more attention now.

KSP When the French Academy if Sciences published a report critical of ICRP for lowering dose it as French Government policy. To many, it was not surprising as France has a stake in nuclear power. They feel that lower dose limit is probably not in this interest. What is the current position of the French Government?

RC: The French Government has signed the European Directive. The French Electric Power Industry is committed to ICRP recommendations.

KSP: Release form a nuclear facility can be controlled by appropriate methods. It may cause increase in the collective doses to workers. In some instances the collective doses to workers may be far more than those to public. Which option will be acceptable in your opinion?

RC: Both occupational and public exposures are being reduced by optimization procedures. Storage of waste on-site may actually cause a potential for accidental exposure of the public as well as exposing workers. As long as individual doses – workers and public – are acceptably low, the situation is optimized.

KSP: The recommendation of ICRP are universally respected. I remember that the National Radiological Protection Board recommended a dose limit of 15 mSv/year even before ICRP recommendation were issued. NRPB faced some amount of criticism. What is the status of implementation in the UK and USA?

RC: The European directive was issued in May1996. These directives are legally binding on all states and the directives were to be implemented by 2000. In UK, the Health and Safety Executive has to make appropriate already been started. There is a need for harmonizing different documents. For instance different exemption levels are given under different contexts in Europe.

KSP: why are there such differences in exemption levels in Europe?

RC: In UK, the Radioactive Substances Act is one of the regulations which is different from The lionizing Radiation Regulation 1985. Health and Safety Executive is reviewing both these. The disposal of radioactive substances comes under the Radioactive Substances Act. The harmonizing of values and concepts and making them consistent is taking some time.

KSP: Was it not because there are some differences in opinions and views?

RC: That is not the reason. Certainly different agencies are at work. Most of the values of exemption levels are given in the European Directives.

KSP: Based on the impression that ICRP may revise the dose limits downward, AERB had its first comprehensive review of occupational exposures in 1989, a year before ICRP 60 was issued. We have implemented the recommendations are similar to those of ICRP except that the maximum dose limit in any year recommended by AERB is 30 mSv instead of 50 mSv recommended by ICRP.

Our experience is that among the various groups using ionizing radiation, industrial radiography is the most important. In India this field is probably one of the most regulated. The Regulatory Board issue authorization only if certified radiographers, a site-in-charge and appropriate radiation measuring instruments and protective accessories are available at every site.

RC: Industrial radiography has certain peculiarities. In this field, the workers are likely to be exposed to high radiation doses. The field has more potential for accidental exposures. I understand that ionizing radiation occurred in the field of industrial radiography. A man whose film badges did not record any reading but did due to radiation exposure related symptoms.

KSP: He must have been totally careless. I remember that the dose to this worker was evaluated by very advanced dosimeter method using his teeth as sample. What do you propose to make this field safer?

RC: This field is such that it is impossible to supervise them well, as their place of work is distributed in various work environments. For instance, often they work alone in the field while laying gas pipelines. So the only way we can improve the safety status in by imparting appropriate training to the workers. The regulatory organisation should ensure that such dedicated training programme is extended to all the workers.

KPS: Since reducing dose in medical X-ray practice is easier and less expensive, is it not more appropriate to allocate resources more prudently to achieve substantial reduction in collective doses in diagnostic radiology? If I say that there should be more efforts to reduce needless medical exposures, it may be looked upon as an attempt to divert public opinion from exposures in nuclear installation. ICRP should come out with such clear statements on avoiding needless exposure.

RC: We have gone a long way. The International Basic Safety for Protection against Radiation and safety of Radiation Sources has given certain guidance values. The United Kingdom also accepted certain guidelines. With these precautions, the collective dose can be reduced by about 40% But this was more than offset by the predominant use of CT scan units.

KSP: When many States in the US brought out guidelines for typical X-ray examination based on the National X-ray Trend Programmes, UK was less enthusiastic about the concept. Now Basic Safety Standards came out with guidance. What is your general view on this? Can you include the guidance levels in regulation?

RC: I believe that prescribing guidance levels similar to the one stated in BSS is in the right direction. The experience in the UK has been that there has been substantial reduction in collective doses to population at large over the year.

KSP: In your lecture at the International Conference on Medical Physics you spoke about carrying out appropriate evaluation of dose to commercial airline workers under the category of occupational workers. How many countries in Europe have done this?

RC: Cosmic rays obviously come under natural radiation. Under the European law, the member states shall undertake surveys to estimate the magnitude of the radiation exposure due to natural radiation. Currently large groups of persons journey by commercially operated airlines. Because of this, exposure to sensitive groups such as pregnant women may also have to be considered. There is a general thinking that dose contribution to the crew of commercial airline should be quantified by appropriate methods. This cab be done by on-board instrumentation and by considering the number of hours of flying by the airline. The intention is not that all the crew must wear dosimeters but the measurement of exposure will have to be carried out systematically.

KSP: At such high altitudes, the primary component of cosmic rays are high energy protons and neutrons. This is probably one area where we cannot do much about source control. What we can do is that regulated the exposure and the altitude in which the airline flies. The probability of radiation hitting the embryo or foetus will be miniscule. What is your thinking?

RC: I must say that currently the air crew are not subject to dose limits. But the radiation dose should be measured reasonably accurately by asking the number of hours the crew has flown and also by ascertaining the route of travel.

KSP: I understand that the Concord has appropriate monitoring equipment on board way back in 1970. When I was attending the Congress of international Radiation Protection Association at Brighton, I was at the dinner table with a group of scientist from UK who were actually making measurements in the Concord. Have you carried out systematic measurements? Is there anything new published since the special issue of “Radiation Protection Dosimetry” journal was published?

RC: Yes. Radiation measurements have been done and date are available.

KSP: I thought that the exposure is significant only during solar flares.

RC: According to my information the radiation levels on no occasion has increased to such an extent during the past 20 years which led to reducing the altitude of the aircraft to get the benefit of atmospheric shielding.

KSP: ICRP recommendation on pregnant women is known to be too conservative. What was the background information? Was there any re-thinking on this? As the dose limit recommended is different to measure, many institution may decide to withdraw pregnant women from radiation work. I understand that the topic is widely discussed in countries such as Canada where a great proportion of medical radiation workers are women.

RC: ICRP considers that the basis for the control of occupational exposure of women who are not pregnant is the same as that for men. On the other hand if a women is or may pregnant there is a need for additional controls to be considered to protect the unborn child. The considered is at times more prone than the post-natal individual to deterministic injuries caused by radiation and may be more sensitive to the induction of later deterministic effects in the live-born child including significant mental retardation will not happen if the exposure of the mother dose not exceed the dose limits now recommended for occupation exposure regardless of the distribution of the exposure over time.
Accidental high exposure of the mother may be more damaging to the concepts than to the mother.

The commission’s policy us that the methods of protection at work for women who may be pregnant should provide a standard of protection for any concepts broadly comparable with that provided for members of the general public. The commission considers that its policy will be adequately applied if the mother is exposed prior to the declaration of pregnancy under the system of protection recommended by the commission including the recommended dose limits for occupational exposure. This is the basis on which the commission recommended that no special occupational dose limits is needed for women in general.

The ICRP thought the recommendation of 2 mSv measured over the abdomen of a pregnant woman for the entire gestation period is very helpful. But there is some feeling that it is very restrictive.

KSP: In fact in Canada Atomic Energy Control Board (AECB) arranged discussion with woman workers in eight cities and asked for views. A few hundred women participated. Many of them argued that there is no reason to change the earlier limit of 10mSv.

RC: The Commission no longer recommends a dose limit of 2 mSv during the gestation period as measured on the abdomen of the pregnant women. The ICRP publication number 75 describes the current ICRP recommendation. Overall risks associated with radiation exposure of men and women are broadly similar. ICRP now sees no need to make any distinction between the two sexes in the control of occupational exposure. But once a worked is known to be pregnant, ICRP recommends higher standard of protection for the concepts.

The advice given in publication No.60 has been interpreted too rigidly. ICRP now recommends that the working conditions of a pregnant worker after the declaration of pregnancy, should be such as to make it unlikely that the addition equivalent dose to the concepts will exceed about one mSv during the remainder of the pregnancy.

It is important to highlight the responsibility of the worker and employer to meet the Commission’s objective. The pregnant worker should declare her pregnancy promptly to the management. The management should then organize the working conditions to make it unlikely that the additional equivalent dose to the concepts will exceed about one mSv during the remainder of the pregnancy.

KSP: Atomic Energy Control Board of Canada had detailed consultations with women groups on the reco0mmendation. I understand they may now recommend an external dose limit of 4 mSv on the abdomen or an intake of 20 percent of the annual limit if intake. ACEB had compared the general risks to the foetus during pregnancy and showed that at 4 mSv it is very low indeed. What is your view on this approach? I feel that if ICRP’s view expressed in publication No.75 is accepted, many employers will discriminate against women being employed in radiation work.

RC: The ICRP position is essentially as it was in publication 60 and elaborated in publication 75. The foetus to be protected broadly as though it were a member of the public.

KSP: Though conceptually it is clear that exposure at the dose limit is just tolerable, exposing everyone to the dose limit all the tome is not acceptable. Was it not more appropriate for ICRP to recommend a range of values rather than a single value?

RC: The current dose limit of 20 mSv per year average for 5 years offers this operational flexibility. A single number is administratively convenient. It is obvious that the body dies not known whether the exposure occurred in one calendar year or another. Biology does not identify this.

KSP: The recommendations of ICRP are scientifically the best available. But you will agree with me that these recommendation have enormous social impact. Is it justifiable for over a dozen specialists in purely scientific disciplines to take such decisions which have enormous social impact? Don’t you think that the representation in ICRP should be broadened to include social scientists and economists?



RC: There are various components to this question. ICRP recommendations reflect the best scientific information. We do not say what is acceptable to society or not. There is one recent development. ICRP is currently engaged in more and more consultations with specialists by providing drafts of their recommendations to other specialists and concerned people for review. It would certainly reveal whether there is any inconsistency in the concept and approach put forward by ICRP. It will help to find out whether there is any fallacy in our approach. I believe the recent ICRP document bear testimony to this.

An Interview with Nobel Laureate Professor Roald Hoffmann

EXTRACT OF THE INTERVIEW GIVEN BY PROFESSOR ROALD HOFFMANN, NOBEL LAUREATE TO DR. K.S. PARTHASARATHY, SECRETARY, AERB ON JANUARY 01, 1998 DURING HIS VISIT TO INDIA TO RECEIVE THE JAWAHARLAL NEHRU BIRTH CENTENARY AWARD AND ATTEND THE 85TH SESSION OF THE INDIAN SCIENCE CONGRESS HELD FROM JANUARY 3 TO 7, 1988 AT HYDERABAD.
(Published earlier in the AERB Newsletter

KSP: Professor Hoffmann, AERB publishes a quarterly newsletter which is sent without charge to universities and institutions carrying our research and development and to individuals. On behalf of the readers of the newsletter I am keen to seek your views on nuclear power and related subjects. I am certain that the readers will value your views.

Hoffmann : In USA, over 100 nuclear power plants are operating. The estimates by the US Nuclear Energy Institute indicate that there is appreciable increase in the capacity factor of nuclear power stations on an average during the past several years. “There is also a claim that these improvements are achieved by the measures taken by the nuclear industry after the accident at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power station. Still there is a feeling that nuclear power is on the decline in US. Is it true?

Hoffmann- It is true that there is no further growth of nuclear power in USA. Some people mistrust nuclear power. Rightly or wrongly, ,many people perceive that nuclear power production is not under control.

However, I do not think that any of these are the real reasons for the lack of growth of nuclear power. In my view the main reason is economic. The petroleum lobby exerts tremendous pressure. Because of this lobbying the price of petroleum products is unrealistically low.

Nuclear energy cannot compete in the open market in that sort of atmosphere.

The academic community is divided on their views on nuclear power. Most of them know that nuclear power is safe . They also know that the fear of environmental degradation due to nuclear power is misplaced, though they have some concern about nuclear waste management. By and large, scientists are pretty well happy with the environmental aspects of nuclear power, but are not so much aware of the economic aspects.

KSP - You mentioned that there is a notion among public that nuclear industry is not control. In what way this perception can be corrected?

Hoffmamm – People are not aware of the strict training programmes instituted by those who operate nuclear power reactors. They are also not aware of the quality control procedures in place. The nuclear industry should strive hard to publicize the information about these activities.

I feel that in a way the perception problem is somewhat insoluble. Though accidents are very rare, the public concern is genuine, as the risk involved is immense in case an accident occurs. Risk perception is not the same thing as risk assessment.

KSP – Is it true that opposition to nuclear power is partly due to the anti establishment attitude of section of the public?

Hoffman – Yes, there is some truth in it. When people are well off as in some of the European countries they find some new things to worry about.

KSP – It is said that giving public all the information is probably the best way to correct is probably the nest way to correct the imbalance, is that really so? There is also a feeling that giving more information by itself may not help. Though the informed person may be little more informed. It may probably sensitize groups of individuals and also make them more concerned.

Hoffman – I am for a very open system. In this respect, NASA did a very good job. They were very sensitive to public opinion. The public will accept risky activities. If they are told openly of the risks. A very open system is always better I am in favour of talking to people and informing them. This is precisely what NASA did. Still, Space has a romance of its own, not like nuclear power.

KSP –Generally, scientists are not good communicators. Nuclear scientists are not different. Do you have any views on the way scientists should communicate?

Hoffman - Television is a good medium. I feel that there should be good TV programme on basic science.

KSP : The staff of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board participated in some TV programmes, mainly in form of discussion. Don’t you agree that science programme have great disadvantage?

Hoffman : Well, they cannot obviously compete with entertainments programmes?

KSP – In the Kyoto conference a few pro-nuclear industrial for a promoted the virtues of nuclear power as a clean source of power which doe not emit green house gases. Do you think this approach is appropriate?

Hoff – I feel that the information on environmental advantages of nuclear power is new. the enhanced greenhouse effect due to fuel combustion is established. Exhaust. From automobiles and gas emission from fossil fuel plants are clearly visible. People are used to burning things, so the notion of emission of carbon dioxide is accepted. People relate drought, flood and climatic disasters to green house effect. People can be easily sensitized to issues of climatic changes. So nuclear power protagonists can have a natural alliance with informed environmentalists.

KSP – What do you think are the other concerns of people in regard to nuclear power?

Hoff: Waster management is an important issue. The public is concerned about waster. I am concerned about waster, both industrial and nuclear. Of course, it is the military nuclear waster, accumulated over the past few decades which creates the greatest problem.

There should be a long term programme for waster management. This is one area in USA, where the local, state level influences matter. Not in my Backyard (NIMBY) is currently the prevalent policy.

As for industrial wastes, heavy metal pollution is very important;. Organics and plastics are biodegradable over a period of a few hundreds of years.

KSP:In the case of nuclear waster also, barring some transuranics, the major part of the radioactivity comes from radionuclide such as Cesium-137 and Strontium-90 just as plastics are biodegradable over a few centuries these fission products decay to years. As a matter of fact you will agree that much of the industrial waster including heavy metals remain toxic for ever and as such should belong to a different class of waster materials. For instance, enormous quantities of mercury are released from coal power stations. What do you think is the ultimate solution of radioactive waster management?

Hoff – In may view, vitrification, followed by storage in geological formations is the solution for radioactive waster. One has to find out geological formations where the vitrified waste can be stored indefinitely. There are many, uncertainties in regard to such geological sites.

KSP – Any general comments about nuclear industry in US?

Hoff – I personally believe that we made a mistake in US. We allowed the nuclear industry to go private. People mistrust private industry.

KSP – Is it because of profit motive.

Hoff – Yes, in a way, private industry may cut corners to make profit. I prefer that the operation of nuclear power plants to be totally in public hands.

KSP – Post Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, the regulatory mechanisms got strengthened. Don’t you think that self regulation is better than the imposed regulation?

Hoff – Yes, self regulation has merits, but in my view, there should be separate regulatory control, totally independent, even when the Government operates nuclear power plants. Regulation and control should be separated from operation. I also strongly feel that in regulatory organizations there is a need to involve well informed environmental scientists.

KSP - What is your view about the renewable sources of power?

Hoff – I am convinced that renewable have vital role to play. Hundred years from now petroleum will be exhausted. Eventually we will have to come back to solar and nuclear energy sources. They are cleaner. Solar is already used significantly in passive heating. There is also scope for large area solar energy collectors. Solar photo-voltaic technology developments in electronics are related. In my opinion solar energy development will unplanned fringe benefit of the development of electronics industry.

KSP – Do you agree that the renewable excluding hydropower are unlikely to make a significant contribution to electric power generation due to various reasons?

Hoff – Solar is already making its contribution in small ways, say for instance, passive methods, hot water heaters, solar calculators. Solar power is currently expensive. But I believe that in a few years from now solar and nuclear will become competitive.

KSP – Professor Hoffmann, I am very grateful to you for sparing your valuable time for this informative interview. Is it your first visits to India?

Hoff – No. I has been here three times earlier. In one of my visits I was at the Ciba Geigy Laboratories. My only regret is that I could not see much of Bombay this time.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Early history of nuclear medicine in India




23 July 2009

The physicists have designed the “hot laboratory” in the institution following the specifications received from USA. They started radioisotope studies in 1951. The institution imported radioisotopes such as P-32, from Harwell, England. Incidentally, Dr Homi Bhabha organized this national conference at the suggestion of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru who wanted that this opportunity may be used to review what has been done in the field of atomic energy till then. Over 100 specialists attended the meeting. The medical use of radioisotopes grew progressively with the commissioning of Apsara reactor in 1956. Besides diagnostic applications, the specialists started using radioisotopes such as iodine-131 and phosphorous-32 in radiotherapy. During early sixties, test monographs for a few radiopharmaceuticals appeared in international pharmacopoeia and in those of some countries. According to the reports available with the Radiopharmaceuticals Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, the Drug Control Administration in India considered to clear radioisotopes under licence number 720. Uses of reactor- produced radioisotopes increased rapidly. They were in diverse form such as ready-to-use preparations for oral use and for use as injectables; short-lived radioisotope generators to prepare ready-to-use organ imaging agents by intravenous use; cold kits amenable to instantaneous and quantitative incorporation of short-lived radioisotopes for organ imaging etc.
-by Dr K S Parthasarathy
Early History of Nuclear Medicine in India

-by Dr K S Parthasarathy

It appears that the first reference on the medical use of radioisotopes in India has been by Dr Subodh Mitra former Director, Chitaranjan Hospital, Calcutta. In a paper titled “Health Protection, and Biological and Medical Applications of Atomic Energy” (Proceedings of the Conference on development of atomic energy for peaceful purposes in India, Nov 1954), he reviewed the radioisotope- related work in his institution.

The physicists have designed the “hot laboratory” in the institution following the specifications received from USA. They started radioisotope studies in 1951. The institution imported radioisotopes such as P-32, from Harwell, England.

Incidentally, Dr Homi Bhabha organized this national conference at the suggestion of Pandit

Jawaharlal Nehru who wanted that this opportunity may be used to review what has been done in the field of atomic energy till then. Over 100 specialists attended the meeting.

The medical use of radioisotopes grew progressively with the commissioning of Apsara reactor in 1956. Besides diagnostic applications, the specialists started using radioisotopes such as iodine-131 and phosphorous-32 in radiotherapy.

During early sixties, test monographs for a few radiopharmaceuticals appeared in international pharmacopoeia and in those of some countries.
According to the reports available with the Radiopharmaceuticals Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, the Drug Control Administration in India considered to clear radioisotopes under licence number 720.

Uses of reactor- produced radioisotopes increased rapidly. They were in diverse form such as ready-to-use preparations for oral use and for use as injectables; short-lived radioisotope generators to prepare ready-to-use organ imaging agents by intravenous use; cold kits amenable to instantaneous and quantitative incorporation of short-lived radioisotopes for organ imaging etc.

The specialists in this field realized from the very beginning that the production, testing and supply of radiopharmaceuticals must fulfil medicolegal aspects related to the manufacture and use of conventional drugs and radiological safety requirements.

With regulatory control in mind, scientists in the Department of Atomic Energy established a radiopharmaceutical committee and a nuclear medicine committee.

These committees covered all aspects related to the safety of premises, products, patients, workers and the public. Director, BARC set up the Radiopharmaceutical Committee on February 23, 1968. The seven-member committee had Dr V.K.Iya then Head, Isotope Division and, a pioneer in the field as its convener.

The other members of the committee Dr R.S.Mani, Shri T.S.Murthy and Shri N.G.S.Gopal all from Isotope Division were eminently qualified specialists. Since radiopharmaceuticals have to satisfy the general requirements of conventional drugs, the committee had a representative from the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS), Government of India, as a member.

The committee was to examine the production, practices, controls and the specifications of the radiopharmaceuticals supplied by the Isotope Division and also to consider and recommend the incorporation of radiopharmaceuticals into the Indian Pharmacopoeia.

Simultaneously, Director, BARC set up a five member Nuclear Medicine Committee with members drawn from BARC (Medical Division, Isotope Division, Radiation Medicine Centre), Directorate of Radiation Protection, and the Directorate General of Health Services, Ministry of Health, Government of India, Delhi.

The Committee evaluated the proposals for research, diagnostic and therapeutic uses of radioisotopes, approved a list of doctors trained in radioisotope techniques for established diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, developed procedures for giving standing clearances to established doctors for using standard products without delay and examined applications from every new user and for every new use of medical radioisotopes.

Another function of the nuclear medicine committee was to establish jointly with radiopharmaceutical committee procedures for the release of new products by the Isotope Division, BARC, for medical use.

These Committees were periodically reconstituted. When The Department of Atomic Energy set up the Board of Radiation and Isotope Technology (BRIT), the reconstituted Radiopharmaceutical Committee was brought under it. The Members of the Committee included specialists in nuclear medicine and pharmacy, Commissioner, FDA or his nominee and Drug Controller (India) or his nominee.

These committees met as frequently as necessary. These procedures assured overall though it may be difficult to find direct legal basis for their activities.

In 1977, the Director General of Health Services, Government of India notified that “radiopharmaceuticals” are exempt from the provisions of Chapter IV of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940.

Many considerations must have contributed to this. The mass of radioactive material in any radiopharmaceutical is too trivial to cause any toxic effect; the normally used radioactive materials such as Tc-99m have very short half-lives; it may not be feasible to study them for sufficiently long periods to evaluate the relevant parameters as is done for conventional pharmaceuticals.

During the early sixties and seventies, BARC was the only agency preparing radio pharmaceuticals. In light of interactions with the specialists in BARC, the officials of the Directorate General of Health Services must have realized that granting exemptions will not have serious consequences. DGHS gave exemption nine years after the formation of the Radiopharmaceuticals Committee in which DGHS also had representation.

The Central Government set up the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB),to enforce safety provisions under the Atomic Energy Act 1962.

AERB reviewed the procedures followed for ensuring safety in the medical use of radioisotopes and retained the set up. In order to provide the much needed legal basis for carrying out medical radiation procedures safely, AERB issued Radiation Surveillance Procedures for Medical Applications of Radiation, 1989 exercising the powers vested under Rule 15 of the Radiation Protection Rules 1971.

As required in the Surveillance procedures, the Board issued several codes; one of them applied to nuclear medicine procedures.

With about 200 physicians licensed to practice nuclear medicine in the country, the facilities available are very modest. Just over 150 hospitals located mainly in cities provide the service.

The field is changing rapidly. The setting up of seven cyclotrons which serve several centres is a notable development.

India needs a ten-fold increase in facilities and man-power to ensure that its population derives the benefits from this advanced field of medicine.▄

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Soybean plant adapts itself to Chernobyl


Recently, scientists have reported how soy plant adapted itself to the radioactively contaminated soil near the stricken Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Dr.K.S.Parthasarathy


Date:23/07/2009 URL: http://www.thehindu.com/thehindu/seta/2009/07/23/stories/2009072350141300.htm Back Sci Tech



Soybean plant adapts itself to Chernobyl

The plants in the contaminated area have a mechanism to protect future progenies by blocking transfer of radio-nuclides to the seeds

Since April 1986, scientists got a unique opportunity to study the impact of radioactive contamination on the plants and animals living near Chernobyl.

The Chernobyl Forum, which is made up of eight specialized agencies of the UN, in its landmark report titled ‘Chernobyl’s Legacy: Health, Environmental and Socio-Economic Impacts,’ made some general remarks on the impact of the accident on the natural environment.
Details emerging

More detailed results of research are emerging now. Researchers from the Slovak Academy of Sciences reported that plants adapted very well to the contaminated environment (Journal of Proteome Research, 2009).

In 2007, they planted ordinary soybean seeds and flaxseeds at a contaminated field in the restricted area about 5 km from the stricken nuclear power plant and at a control field in the same region nearly 100 km away.

The soil in the contaminated area had 163 times more radioactivity (cesium-137) than that in the control area.

The seeds from the contaminated area had less length and width; they weighed about 50 per cent less than those from the control field. Their water-inhibition process was found to be different.

The uptake of radio-nuclides varied significantly within the plant and also between plants.

Though the plant absorbed about 10 per cent of the radioactive contamination, the seeds showed only very low levels of radioactivity. The plants have a mechanism to protect future progenies by blocking transfer of radio-nuclides to the seeds.

Brazil nut, which is well known as the most radioactive food, accumulates radioisotopes of radium. The root system of that tree covers a large area of soil and accumulates radioactivity from the soil.

Nature does not develop any mechanism to arrest the accumulation of radioactivity by the seed. “How do you explain the difference in behaviour between soy plant and Brazil nut tree?”

“I can only speculate that trees might have different mechanisms than plants. Trees are long-living organisms, when compared to crop plants, and thus might not have immediate interest to protect their future progenies from unfavourable environmental conditions”, Dr Martin Hajduch the lead author responded to my e-mail query.
Increased levels

The researchers wanted to develop a model for plant adaptation to increased levels of radiation. They froze the seeds with liquid nitrogen, crushed them to extract the mixture of proteins they contained and ran the seed proteins on 2-Dimensional gel Electrophoresis.

They looked for differences in expression levels of proteins between seeds grown in the contaminated field versus the control field.

The seeds from soy plants grown in contaminated field contained different types and amounts of proteins compared with those from control field. The former plants made many changes to defend themselves and adjusted the levels of several proteins that guard against heavy metals, disease etc.

The researchers found that a certain specific protein which, in test tube studies demonstrated a protective effect against radiation-induced damage, exhibited a 32 per cent higher expression in the seeds from contaminated fields.

The levels of hundreds of proteins which are known for their ability to shuffle other proteins around or tie them up in storage had been lowered.
Why soybean?

Why did they choose soybean plant for the study? “The reason is that soybean is a very important crop worldwide and I worked with it also before”, Dr Hajduch responded to my e-mail query.

“Large percentage of population depends on soybean”, he added.

Do you expect that the mechanisms you observed will be present in plants growing in high background radiation areas such as certain coastal regions in India?

“I would expect it as the mechanisms that plants use to protect their future progenies from harmful effects of radio-contaminated environment should be the same, regardless of the geographical location”, he replied.

Why should we carry out such studies?

“If scientists can understand how plants survive in ultra-hostile environments, it will help them engineer super hearty plants to withstand drought conditions or grow on marginal cropland”, (Aaron Rowe, wired.com, 2009).

K.S. PARTHASARATHY
FORMER SECRETARY, AERB

ksparth@yahoo.co.uk

© Copyright 2000 - 2009 The Hindu

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Errors in radiation treatment of cancer




http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?
file=2009071650111300.htm&date=2009/07/16/&prd=seta&


________________________________________


Errors in radiation treatment of cancer
Several hospitals do not participate in the virtually free audit programme
________________________________________
A well trained clinician can detect exposures involving a 10 per cent or more over-dosage
If the dose delivered is less than 5 per cent of the prescribed amount many cancer cells survive
________________________________________
Everyone knows that Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) contributes to the strategic areas in the country. Unknown to many, BARC has been, since 1976, rendering a priceless service to radiation therapy centres in India. It ensured that the error in the radiation dose to millions of cancer patients who undergo treatment remained within the clinically acceptable limits of plus or minus 5 per cent of the dose prescribed by radiation oncologists.
Side effects
Doses more than 5 per cent of the prescribed amount, lead to side effects; if less than 5 per cent, many cancer cells survive, causing recurrence. A well trained clinician can detect accidental exposures involving a 10 per cent or more over-dosage, based upon an unusually high incidence of adverse patient reactions (ICRP, 2000).
BARC started a postal dose quality audit programme in 1976, with 9 hospitals, using cobalt-60 machines, participating.
Presently, the Radiation Standards Section (RSS), BARC sends capsules containing a specially prepared thermo-luminescent powder to the hospital. As per instruction, the medical physicist of the hospital exposes them to a specific dose under specified conditions before returning them to BARC. BARC scientists at Trombay estimate the dose accurately.
Most hospitals deliver accurate radiation doses to patients. Some hospitals default. Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB)/BARC has asked hospitals showing unacceptable errors to stop treatment of patients till the issue is resolved.
The service covered over 250 hospitals in India. From the 1990s, 80 per cent of the participants show deviations within acceptable limits compared to 50 to 60 per cent during the earlier period.
Many years ago, in one hospital, the source in its cobalt unit did not move into the treatment position; the patients did not receive any dose for a month, till BARC scientists identified the defect.
Another instance
In another instance, the dose was down by 40 per cent, as an engineer who repaired the unit shortened the length of a cable pulling the source into position. The audit service identified the latter.
During 2007-2008, (48th and 49th batch audit) eight beams showed errors of serious magnitude, ranging from -13.2 per cent to 72.8 per cent. They were due to calculation errors or mistaken irradiation of capsules. A positive deviation leads to under-dosing and inadequate treatment.
We may not know of adverse effects, if any, on any patient, as no one reported them to AERB, though the Atomic Energy (Radiation Protection) Rules, 2004 demand it.
It is appalling to note that several hospitals do not participate in this virtually free service which provides an independent verification of the dose. During February 2006, BARC invited 100 hospitals to the audit programme. Only 33 joined. The number joined and the number of invitations sent for a few batches are as follows: March 2007 (63/142); September 2008(37/98); May 2009 (65/207).
Analysis completed
The analysis for May 2009 is being completed. The number of hospitals with deviations of more than 10 per cent for the other years were 1, 10 and 4. One may feel that the number showing greater deviations are very few.
Little comfort
That is of little comfort for the 40 to 50 patients who may receive improper or inadequate radiation treatment at the defaulting hospitals every day. If there is a -20 per cent deviation, all the patients will get overdosed. An alert oncologist may find something amiss.
The deviations in the institutions which do not cooperate are unknown.
The callous, inexcusable indifference shown by many hospitals in not participating in the audit is at the cost of the patients. Patients may suffer unexpected side effects or receive inadequate treatment due to correctable errors.
Patients getting treated with cobalt machines or accelerators, or their relatives, may ask the head of the radiation therapy department whether the hospital participates in the BARC dose audit programme.
A dilemma
The programme faces a dilemma. Being a routine service, BARC, a research and development agency, may find it difficult to continue the programme routinely.
The stakeholders such as AERB, BARC, Directorate General of Health Services, State Directorates of Medical Education and Health Services must hand over the responsibility of dose audit to an agency, accredited by AERB. BARC can monitor the functioning of this agency. Such an audit by independent agencies is essential to ensure that cancer patients are receiving the correct dose and to avoid gruesome consequences of over-exposures from radiotherapy equipment.
K.S. PARTHASARATHY
FORMER SECRETARY, AERB
( ksparth@yahoo.co.uk)
© Copyright 2000 - 2009 The Hindu

Friday, July 10, 2009

Nuclear medicine: a possible cure to blood cancer


The latest Image of nyuclear medicine showed that nuclear medicine procedures can be used to treat non-Hodgins lymphoma

K.S.Parthasarathy


July 3, 2009


Nuclear medicine: a possible cure to blood cancer
By Dr K. S Parthasarathy
Last month, Dr. A. Lagaru from the Division of Nuclear Medicine at Stanford University Medical Centre and his colleagues won the Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) 2009 Image of the Year award in Toronto.
Their poster paper contained an image clearly depicting how radio-immunotherapy can successfully treat non Hodgins Lymphoma (NHL), a potentially fatal form of blood cancer. The US National Cancer Institute estimates that in 2009, 65,980 new cases of NHL will be diagnosed in the US leading to 19,500 deaths.
“Radio-immunotherapy is a form of personalised medicine that combines the cancer fighting ability of radiation therapy with the precise targeting capacity of immunotherapy” (Imaging technology, June 16,2009). It is based on the body’s natural defence system, which protects it from many diseases.
The Stanford group studied two immunotherapy agents Bexxar, which is Iodine-131 based and Zevalin, which is Yttrium-90 based. Iodine-131 and Yttrium-90 are radioactive and emit particulate radiation. The immunotherapy agents home in on the cancerous cells, which become sitting targets for the particulate radiation emitted by Iodine-131 or Yttrium-90 as the case may be. The award-winning image is two sets of before and after Positron Emission Tomography scans of two patients, one treated with Bexxar and the other with Zevalin. Both patients did not show any metabolically active cancer as early as three months after treatment as demonstrated by their PET scans.
A PET scanner uses small amounts of certain radioactive drugs. A special camera that works with a computer provides pictures of the area of the body being imaged. Cancer cells grow and multiply uncontrollably. While doing so, they consume enormous amounts of energy. Basically, this energy comes from burning glucose
Cancer cell metabolise sugar at higher rates than normal cells. Fluoro deoxyglucose (FDG) is a marker for sugar metabolism. It contains Fluorine-18, a positron emitting radionuclide, whose presence will help to trace and locate the sites where FDG molecules get accumulated. Cancerous areas draw higher amounts of FDG, an ideal marker for the disease and its spread. PET scans produce three-dimensional images of the precise location of FDG in the body
“The image of the year was chosen because it shows how molecular therapy can cure non Hodgin’s lymphoma and it provides objective evidence that the patient has been cured”, Dr Henry N, Wagner Jr, a professor of environmental sciences at Johns Hopkins University and past president of the SNM clarified. The Stanford Specialists treated 71 patients. They showed that both the immunotherapy agents are safe and effective in treating non Hodgin’s lymphoma, even in cases where the disease has spread extensively. Twenty four out of 35 patients responded to Bexxar; 28 out of 36 to Zevalin. Taken the two groups together, 27 showed complete response to the drugs. However, in 19 patients the disease progressed in spite of treatment.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Radioactivity in phosphogypsum

The Atomic Energy Regulatory Board has issued a safety directive on the use of phophogypsum in building materials and agriculture. AERB reviewed the radiological safety significance of the material before issuing it. Phosphogypsum contains radioactive materials such as uranium-238 and radium-226.

K.S.Parthasarathy




July 2, 2009


Radioactivity of phosphogypsum to be studied

Phosphogypsum may contain radioactive materials such as uranium-238 and radium-226

The AERB has recently issued a safety directive on the use of phosphogypsum

If you visit any fertilizer factory, you may see large quantities of phosphogypsum (PG) in its premises. It is produced when rock phosphate is treated with sulphuric acid. Each ton of phosphoric acid leaves behind nearly five tons of PG. In many countries, the building industry extensively uses PG in producing cement, wallboard, and other building materials.

Phosphogypsum is not an innocuous material. Besides many heavy elements, it may contain significant quantities of radioactive materials such as uranium-238 and radium-226. Phosphogypsum produced from imported rock phosphates contains typically activity concentrations of U-238 in the range 0.1-0.2 Bq/g and Ra-226 in the range 0.5-1.3 Bq/g. (Bq is a unit of radioactivity. In a radioactive material having a radioactivity of one Bq, one atom disintegrates every sec).

The Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) has been examining the radiological safety implications of adding phosphogypsum in building and construction materials and in using it in agriculture.

Based on the principles followed internationally, the Board has recently issued a safety directive on the use of phosphogypsum.
Analysing content

The Board directed that all rock phosphate processing industries shall analyze Uranium-238 and Radium-226 content in each imported consignment of rock phosphate as well as in the phosphogypsum produced from its processing and shall report the results to AERB on a quarterly basis. AERB will review this data for a period of about two years for deciding on the frequency of such analysis in future.

AERB decided that its approval is not required for selling phosphogypsum for its use in building and construction materials, if the activity concentration of Ra-226 in it is less than or equal to 1 Bq/g.

If Ra-226 concentration in phosphogypsum is more than one Bq/g, the seller must mix it with other ingredients such that the Ra-226 activity concentration in bulk material is less than or equal to 1.0 Bq/g.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), at one Bq/g, we need not regulate the material as the radiation doses to persons involved will be insignificant, irrespective of the quantity of material whether it is in its natural state or has been subjected to some form of processing.

AERB stated that its approval is not required for manufacturing and use of phosphogypsum panels or blocks, if they have Ra-226 activity less than 40 kBq/square metre area of any surface of the panels/blocks.

The possible annual increase in radiation dose to a person living in a building made with such panels is sufficiently low to qualify for exemption as per guidelines accepted by the European Commission on Radiation Protection.

The activity levels prescribed by AERB are such that they do not present an unreasonable radiation hazard to anyone.

Further, AERB decided that there need be no restriction for use of phosphogypsum in agricultural applications from the radiological safety considerations.

Twelve fertilizer plants in India presently process rock phosphates imported from countries such as Jordan, China, Morocco, Egypt, Senegal, Togo and others for production of phosphoric acid / fertilizers.
Annual generation

According to Building Materials and Technology Promotion Council, Indian companies generate 4.5 million tonnes of phosphogypsum annually. Over 10 million tonnes gets accumulated at plant sites. In Florida, U.S., alone, more than 900 million tons of PG is stacked in more than 25 stacks. Thirty million tons of PG is produced each year.

AERB received queries from the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers, the Ministry of Agriculture and some of the fertilizer plants regarding restrictions based on radiological safety considerations, if any, on use of phosphogypsum in building and construction materials and in agriculture respectively.

As is the practice evolved by AERB from its inception, the Board issued the directive after a comprehensive and in-depth review of all aspects and after broad consultation with all stakeholders. The inputs needed to arrive at the directive came from extensive research by the scientists from the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and from the deliberations of specialists in related fields.

K.S. PARTHASARATHY

(Raja Ramanna Fellow, Department of Atomic Energy)

ksparth@yahoo.co.uk

© Copyright 2000 - 2009 The Hindu

Friday, May 01, 2009

Lessons from TMI Accident:US Nuclear





28 April 2009

The US nuclear power industry learnt many lessons from the accident. These led to make US nuclear power plants enviably efficient and safe. In 1980, the average capacity factor (the ratio of electricity produced compared with the maximum electric power a plant can produce, operating at full power all the year around) for US nuclear power reactors was 56.3%; it increased steadily and remained consistently above 90% for the past ten years. Sixteen of the 104 reactors had capacity factors of over 100% in 2008. According to the American Nuclear Society (ANS), the clean up after the accident offered unique technological and radiological challenges. It took 12 years. So far the utility spent nearly US$973 million. The decommissioning team shipped 342 fuel canisters safely for long-term storage at the Idaho National Laboratory. More than 1000 skilled workers carried out safely and successfully the clean up plan developed by a team of specialists. It began in August 1979, with the first shipments of accident-generated lowlevel radiological waste to Richland, Washington. In the cleanup’s closing phases, in 1991, approximately one percent of the fuel and debris remains in the vessel. The team emptied the last remaining water from the TMI-2 reactor in 1991. The cleanup ended in December 1993. The Unit 2 received a license from the NRC to remain as a monitored storage facility, to be decommissioned in 2014.- by Dr K S Parthasarathy

Lessons from TMI Accident: US Nuclear


- by Dr K S Parthasarathy

March 28, 1979 is a day every one in nuclear power industry wants to forget. It was on that fateful day the most serious accident occurred at Unit 2 of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pennsylvania, USA. The accident did not kill or injure any plant worker or member of the public



The unit 2 (900 MWe, Pressurized Water Reactor) was operating at 97% power; some equipment malfunctioned; this, together with certain design-related problems and worker errors led to partial melt down of its core. It shook the confidence of the public.



The clean up measures to mitigate the effects of the accident were very expensive. But the environmental impact of the accident was not high. The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) reported that the average radiation dose to 2 million people in the area was about one millirem, compared to the dose due to natural gamma background radiation of about 100 125 millirem for the area; the maximum dose to a person at the site boundary would have been less than 100 millirem.



Several independent groups of respected professionals investigated the accident comprehensively and concluded that in spite of serious damage to the reactor, most of the radionuclides were contained; the actual release had negligible effects on the physical health of individuals or environment. (NucNet release March 23).



According to NRC the accident “brought about sweeping changes involving emergency response planning, reactor operator training, human factors engineering, radiation protection, and many other areas of nuclear power plant operations. It also caused the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to tighten and heighten its regulatory oversight “(NRC Fact sheet, March 2009).



The Kemeny Commission set up by Jimmy Carter, the then US president, to investigate the accident made comprehensive recommendations.



The US nuclear power industry learnt many lessons from the accident. These led to make US nuclear power plants enviably efficient and safe.



In 1980, the average capacity factor (the ratio of electricity produced compared with the maximum electric power a plant can produce, operating at full power all the year around) for US nuclear power reactors was 56.3%; it increased steadily and remained consistently above 90% for the past ten years. Sixteen of the 104 reactors had capacity factors of over 100% in 2008.



According to the American Nuclear Society (ANS), the clean up after the accident offered unique technological and radiological challenges. It took 12 years. So far the utility spent nearly US$973 million. The decommissioning team shipped 342 fuel canisters safely for long-term storage at the Idaho National Laboratory.



More than 1000 skilled workers carried out safely and successfully the clean up plan developed by a team of specialists. It began in August 1979, with the first shipments of accident-generated lowlevel radiological waste to Richland, Washington. In the cleanup’s closing phases, in 1991, approximately one percent of the fuel and debris remains in the vessel.



The team emptied the last remaining water from the TMI-2 reactor in 1991. The cleanup ended in December 1993. The Unit 2 received a license from the NRC to remain as a monitored storage facility, to be decommissioned in 2014.



TMI-2 cleanup operations produced over 10.6 million litres of accident-generated water that was processed, stored and ultimately evaporated safely.



Early in the cleanup, the team completely severed TMI-2 from any connection to TMI Unit 1. The owners do not anticipate any further use of TMI-2.



Over a dozen major independent health studies of the accident showed no evidence of any abnormal increase of cancers around TMI years after the accident (ANS, 2005). Specialists do not expect any adverse health effect among the populations living in the area is as the radiation doses to the population were negligible.



In June 1996, Harrisburg US District Court Judge Sylvia Rambo dismissed a class action lawsuit alleging that the accident caused health effects.



The National Cancer Institute studied the cancer mortality rates around 52 nuclear power plants including TMI and nine US Department of Energy facilities at the request of US Senator Edward M. Kennedy, chairman of the Senate Committee on Labour and Human Resources.



The study concluded that the survey has produced no evidence that an excess occurrence of cancer has resulted from living near nuclear facilities.



During TMI-2 accident, TMI-1 was shut down for refuelling. It remained shut down till October 1985. TMI-1 received all the benefits from the lessons learnt from the accident at TMI-2.



According to the World Nuclear Association, When TMI-1 restarted, its owners, General Public Utilities pledged that they would operate the plant safely and efficiently; they desired that it would become a leader in the nuclear power industry (WNA, 2001). The plant lives up to their expectations.



The owners of TMI-1 modified the plant and revamped the training and operating procedures in light of the lessons of TMI-2.



Since then, TMI-1 clocked many creditable records. In 1997, TMI-1 completed the longest operating run of any light water reactor in the history of nuclear power worldwide - 616 days and 23 hours of uninterrupted operation. (That run was also the longest at any steam-driven plant in the U.S., including plants powered by fossil fuels.) In October 1998, TMI employees completed three million hours of work without a lost-work day accident. In 2008, it clocked a capacity factor of 106.7%.



The licence to operate TMI-1 expires on April 19, 2014. On January 8, 2008, the utility owners have applied to operate the reactor for an additional 20 years. The NRC has issued the safety evaluation report (NRC release, March 13). Three Mile Island Alert, a nuclear watchdog founded in 1977 has opted not to oppose the plant owner’s (Exelon) application to re-license the plant through 2034.




The record performance of all US nuclear p ower plants post TMI may gradually remove the stigma attached to them because of the TMI accident.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Uranium-in-hair test useless

I wrote the following article in response to of a news-story on "uranium in the hair of children of Faridkot"

Dr K.S.Parthasarathy




SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Friday, April 24, 2009, Chandigarh, India
Uranium-in-hair test useless
K.S. Parthasarathy

For the past few weeks, the ‘uranium in hair’ news story from Faridkot has been receiving a lot of media attention.The presence of uranium in hair is nothing new. In USA, several analytical laboratories analyze hair samples and offer advice and treatment. At US $180 per sample, it is a thriving business. Experts argue that the test is useless in the diagnosis of diseases.

Presence of uranium in the hair of children by itself does not mean anything. “I have data on uranium in hair for more than 20,000 persons. I have never seen a single case in which it was clinically significant and affected treatment”, said Dr William Walsh, a specialist in the field responding to my e-mail query.

According to Ronald Kathren, Emeritus Professor, Washington State University, a well-known expert on uranium related fields, background levels of uranium in hair vary highly from person to person and region to region, depending largely on dietary factors.

On June 17, 2008, Aetna, the US agency providing scientific information on health care, asserted that hair analysis has not been proven to be of use in either the diagnosis or treatment of autism.

The American Autism Society concluded thus: “The exact cause of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) is not well understood. …..Currently there are no biological markers for ASD, and diagnosis is based solely on behavioral criteria”.

Pritpal Sigh, head of Baba Farid claimed that “the results were startling”… “around 80 per cent of samples… revealed the presence of uranium in levels that the experts have described as pathological,” he said.

Did they collect for comparison, hair samples from their healthy siblings or from normal children from the regions from which the autistic children came? The study appears to be flawed. My repeated attempts to get the uranium test results from the German Company failed.

Some people made un-substantiated, un-scientific and preposterous claims on the origin of uranium. They attributed the allegedly increased levels to Indian nuclear reactors at 150 km away away, Pakistan’s reactors and winds from Afghanistan. A competent team of scientists from the Department of Atomic Energy is studying the matter. I do not want to prejudice their investigation.

During the 60s, some people in USA argued that uranium in peaches from a region near the Hudson River might have originated from a uranium enrichment plant located across the river.

An enterprising lawyer found that peaches from far off California also contained uranium. Peaches grown in cultivated farms, using fertilizers were more “radioactive” than those grown in virgin fields. Phosphatic fertilizers contain uranium!

Uranium run off from the fields may cause increase in the concentration of uranium in drinking water. This aspect needs closer investigation. Uranium enters body through food and water. Most of it is excreted promptly. Body retains a small portion. A portion of it appears in hair.

We cannot avoid the presence of uranium around us. It is present in rocks, soil, water etc. The first one metre layer of a ten cent piece of land may contain about one kg of uranium. It may be more, or less depending on local geology. Water entering the soil pores carries traces of uranium with it.

Normally, the uranium concentrations in water in India are less than a fraction of a microgramme to a few microgrammes per litre. Scientists have measured moderately high concentrations at a few locations.

Researchers have found that the maximum concentrations of a few hundred to a few thousand microgrmmes per litre in USA, Finland and UK. For uranium, the maximum acceptable concentration of uranium in water is based on its chemical toxicity.

On September 15, 2008, Pritpal Singh sought financial support from Mukesh Ambani. “Dr Carin Smit with her team visited our centre and stayed with us for 15 days and diagnosed the most severe cases and came to the conclusion that mostly kids are highly toxified because of Mercury,” he wrote.

Now Smit claims that uranium is the cause for the health conditions of the children! The investigations on the appropriateness and the legality of some of the treatment practices such as “chelation therapy”, advocated by the foreign team, may open a can of worms.

— The writer is former Secretary, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board

Friday, April 17, 2009

Radiation hits insects

Researchers have found that the populations of insects dwindling at Chernobyl, the World's most sever nuclear accident. Not much systematic work has been reported from the region. Reduction in insect populations can be due to many reasons. More definitive studies are needed to get the final answers.

Dr.K.S.Parthasarathy





Radiation hits insects
K.S. Parthasarathy

















Nearly 23 years ago, on April 26 1986, the most serious accident at Unit 4 of the Chernobyl nuclear power station released large quantities of radioactive materials. Anders P. Moeller and Timothy A. Mousseau, researchers at the University of Paris and South Carolina respectively noted that the ecological consequences of radiation from Chernobyl are poorly known. In the Biology Letters, published on line on March 18, 2009, they claimed reductions in the abundance of insects and spiders linked to radiation from Chernobyl.

Their study covered insect pollinators (bumble-bees and butterflies), predators (dragon flies and spiders) and herbs-feeding insects such as grasshoppers.

Compared to other studies published so far, the present study produced by far the most extensive dataset. The authors carried out two kinds of insect census: point counts covering over 700 sites over three years and line transects.

Since environmental factors other than radiation can affect the abundance of insects, they controlled potentially confounding variables that could affect the relationship between abundance and the level of radiation.

The authors have used scientifically sound methods of census and statistically robust analysis to arrive at their notable conclusions.

Based on other studies they concluded that most radiation around Chernobyl is currently in the topmost soil where most insects live.

“Butterfly eggs, larvae or pupae spent time in the soil layer or vegetation just above. This could negatively affect survival and fecundity and hence abundance. Alternatively, indirect effects of radiation on prey could potentially explain the reduced abundance of spiders and dragonflies, but not the reduced abundance of bumble-bees, butterflies and grasshoppers”, the authors argue.

The authors believe that these results have implications for ecosystems and overall ecosystem functioning. They noted that reduced abundance of pollinators such as bumble-bees and butterflies generally affects plant fecundity and seed set when plant fecundity is pollen limited.

Spiders feed on other insects; if spider population dwindles, it may have impact on the abundance of other insects. “Pollination and predation are considered important ecosystem functioning, suggesting that the Chernobyl region and its surrounding is a perturbed ecosystem”, the authors clarified.

The dwindling population of insects in Chernobyl may very well be due to the rise in populations of insect-eating species such as birds in the exclusion zone around the stricken reactor. Anecdotal evidence suggests that many species sprang up in the absence human habitation. Much more work is needed to get final answers.

Background radiation in certain areas of Kerala and Tamil Nadu is above normal (far too less than that in Chernobyl). I asked Dr Mousseau whether the study of insects and other invertebrates in such high background radiation areas (HBRA) is of any interest. “It would seem to me that this region would likely reveal some very interesting adaptations to radiation that might not have had time to evolve in other regions”, he responded.

. “…it would be important to focus on a few key species that occur in this area and examine survival and reproduction with control sites. Similarly, it would be valuable to examine the community of organisms, especially insects, to determine if species composition changes in a predictable way. Either way, I suspect that this region would be an excellent target for further investigation and my suspicion is that one would be very likely to generate many exciting discoveries of organismal responses to this environmental effect”, he asserted.

Such studies in the high background radiation areas in India may offer invaluable information on the impact of low level radiation on insects, earthworms and such other species.

— The writer is Raja Ramanna Fellow, Department of Atomic Energy

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

India's heavy water project comes of age

The Heavy Water Board (HWB), India mastered the technology to produce heavy water indigenously. India is now self sufficient in heavy water and has exported substantial quantities of it. the brief article in the Edit Page of the Deccan Herald reviews the progress made by HWB.

Dr K.S.Parthasarathy





April 6, 2009

IN PERSPECTIVE
India's heavy water project comes of age
By K S Parthasarathy
Techonology for heavy water is being developed. This may lower energy consumption by 60 pc.


It is six decades since Dr Homi Jehangir Bhabha, the architect of nuclear India, initiated moves to make heavy water as a strategic material; he dreamt that India should produce large quantities of it indigenously. He converted his dream into a resolution and got it approved by the Board of Research on Atomic Energy at its second meeting held in Bombay on April 9 and 10, 1948.

“The government should explore the possibilities of using cheap hydroelectric power in India for manufacturing heavy water, on the one hand for our own requirements, and on the other for sale to other countries,” Bhabha pleaded in a covering note to Nehru. The Board’s resolution did not refer to any sale to other countries. So it probably was an afterthought by Bhabha.

In 1954, Dr Bhabha convinced Nehru to set up a fertiliser cum heavy water plant (HWP) at Nangal. The Nangal plant, the largest plant of this type in the world, produced the first drop of heavy water on August 9, 1962. In the next few decades, such drops accumulated into drums at Nangal, Kota, Tuticorin, Thalcher, Baroda, Thal, Hazira and Manuguru.

The rest as they say is history. From dreams to drums, the saga of heavy water production in India is a notable success story.

Heavy water is the coolant and moderator in Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR). India is self sufficient in heavy water production, and the Heavy Water Board (HWB) has exported 205 tonnes of heavy water so far.

Heavy water is similar to ordinary water (H2O). But there is a key difference in it. In heavy water, two regular hydrogen atoms are replaced with deuterium, a heavy isotope of hydrogen. Ordinary water contains about 150 parts per million of heavy water. We have to process over 100, ten litre buckets of water to get a cup of heavy water.

India is the largest manufacturer of heavy water in the world, perhaps the only country which has mastered the two processes (hydrogen sulphide-water bi-thermal and ammonia -hydrogen mono-thermal) to produce it. HWB is developing a technology at Baroda using water — ammonia exchange process to operate a heavy water plant independently of fertiliser plants. The cost of energy constitutes 70-80 per cent of the operating cost of HWPs. HWB could reduce over the last decade, specific energy (energy needed to produce a kg of heavy water) consumption by about 36 per cent by systematic energy conservation measures.

It is developing a novel, safe and clean technology to produce heavy water based on hydrogen-water exchange process; specific energy consumption may then be reduced by a further 60 per cent.

Low cost

Chairman and managing director of the Nuclear Power Corporation of India (NPCIL) SK Jain, the main customer of HWB, has acknowledged that the cost of heavy water had come down by 20 per cent in the last few years. “NPCIL could have a surplus of Rs 11,000 crore just on that account,” he said. Plus during 2007-08, all heavy water plants excelled in their performance.

“The capacity utilisation during 2008-09 is expected to touch 125 per cent. HWP Manuguru achieved a capacity utilisation of 137 per cent and the lowest ever specific energy consumption during the year” A L N Rao chairman and chief executive, HWB, informed scientists attending the Heavy Water Day-2009.

HWB has diversified its activities successfully. The board produced many solvents vital to the nuclear industry, and extracted 18O, a valuable isotope for biomedical research, developed technologies to produce sodium metal, to recover uranium from phosphatic fertilisers and to prepare enriched boron.

HWB has faced many challenges (plant operation with fertiliser factories, power scarcity, export controls, poor national industrial infrastructure etc.) in mastering a technology known only to a few advanced countries.

Rao said, “In the functioning of the HWB or of various sub-committees of the board, or of the senior officers at different levels, I have seen team building qualities, challenges being taken up by youngsters and not getting stuck with problems but finding a way out. That’s what has made us move forward.”

Aptly said, the mood is upbeat in HWB.

(The writer is with the Department of Atomic Energy)

Monday, March 23, 2009

Stem cell research gets a shot in the arm

US President Barack Obama removed the barriers to responsible research involving human stem cell research, thereby dispensing with the restrictions former President George W Bush junior introduced. This may provide a shot in the arm for further research in this very useful area.

Dr K.S.Parthasarathy

The article can be located at the following link;
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2009/20090320/science.htm#1




SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Friday, March 20, 2009, Chandigarh, India

Stem cell research gets a shot in the arm
By K S Parthasarathy

On March 9, 2009 US President Barack Obama signed an epoch making executive order “removing barriers to responsible scientific research involving human stem cells”. It is indeed a shot in the arm of the beleaguered stem cell researchers.

Stem cells are “blank slate” cells which can divide and renew over long periods. They can develop into a specialised cell, tissue or organ and can effectively serve as a sort of repair system for the body.

Medical specialists believe that stem cells have unlimited potential which can be used to return memory to Alzheimer’s patients, to enable wheel-chair bound patients to walk or to replace damaged skin of patients.

The possibility of miracle cures lies in tweaking the cells to develop into new insulin-producing cells to treat or even cure diabetics, cardio-myocytes to replace damaged heart tissue or cartilage cells to treat arthritis, new nerve cell connections to treat diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive degenerative disease that attacks the motor neurons in the spinal cord; it leads to debilitating paralysis of limbs and respiration. Appropriately morphed stem cells may replace nerve cells damaged due to spinal injury.

“Advances over the past decade in this promising scientific field have been encouraging, leading to broad agreement in the scientific community that the research should be supported by Federal funds”, Obama wrote in his order.

He conceded that for the past eight years, the authority of the Department of Health and Human Services, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH), to fund and conduct human embryonic stem cell research has been limited by Presidential actions.

On August 9, 2001, Bush decided that federal funds may be awarded for research using human embryonic stem cells if “The derivation process (which begins with the destruction of the embryo) was initiated prior to 9:00 P.M. EDT on August 9, 2001; the stem cells must have been derived from an embryo that was created for reproductive purposes and was no longer needed.”

Mr. Bush did not accept the appeal of several scientists including eighty Nobel laureates urging funding for research on human embryonic stem cells.

On March 9,while welcoming Mr Obama’s decision The New York times noted that Mr. Bush restricted federal financing for embryonic stem cell research to what turned out to be 20 or so stem cell lines that had been created prior to his announcement.

“Those lines are too limited in number, variety and quality to allow the full range of needed research”, the paper clarified.

Obama’s “move ends a long, bleak period in which the moral objections of religious conservatives were allowed to constrain the progress of a medically important science”, the paper observed.

Scientists have to wait till new guidelines governing what research can qualify for federal support are issued by the National Institutes of Health in 120 days as decreed by Mr. Obama

There is another roadblock in the form of Dickey-Wicker amendment (by Representative Jay Dickey, Republican of Arkansas, and Representative Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi) which prohibits the use of federal funds to support scientific work that involves the creation of embryos for research purposes or the destruction of human embryos (as happens when stem cells are extracted). Congress has actively renewed that ban each year since 1996.

Scientists who want to create embryos—and extract stem cells — matched to patients with specific diseases, cannot get federal funding till Congress withdraws the amendment. Obama acted swiftly; he left further action to the Congress.

The writer is Raja Ramanna Fellow, Department of Atomic Energy.

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