If radiation hormesis is a valid concept, we might expect small doses of radiation to ward off the bio-negative effects of higher doses - obviously not through the creation of antibodies but by some currently unknown mechanism. Figure 11 illustrates just such a phenomenon.
In this 1990 experiment by M. Yonezawa et al. [Yonezawa, M., Takeda, A., and Misonoh, J. Acquired radioresistance after low-dose x-irradiation in mice. Journal of Radiation Research, 31, 256, 1990], mice were irradiated with a low dose of X-rays (50 cGy or 50,000 mrad) two weeks before a second potentially lethal dose of 740 cGy (740,000 mrad). The survival rates of the irradiated group were compared with the unexposed controls. There isn't much question as to which mouse group I'd want to line up with on "innoculation day."
Table 8 (in chapter 8 - or see below) shows the dose-response for humans is similar to that which Yonezawa finds for mice - at 700 mrem, we're both dead or close to it. Would humans have a similar radio-resistance response? We don't know and aren't likely to until the knee-jerk reaction to anything nuclear is abated by scrapping the LNT. If I were a nuclear worker - involved in changing fuel elements where high-level (but so far, nonfatal) accidents have occurred, or an astronaut potentially subjected to a cosmic radiation barrage, or perhaps a soldier with the potential for high-level exposure from a neutron bomb, I think I'd want someone to look into the radio-resistance phenomenon who wasn't committed to the LNT hypothesis and likely to state at the outset, "All radiation is harmful - and it's our job to keep you from having any."
Table 8 – Acute Radiation Syndrome
|
||||||
Subclinical Range
0 – 100 rads |
Therapeutic Range
100 – 500 rads |
Lethal Range
500+ rads |
||||
100 –
200
|
200 –
300
|
300 –
500
|
500 –
2000
|
2000+
|
||
Appropriate
Action
|
None
|
Clinical surveillance
|
Therapy effective
|
Therapy promising
|
Therapy palliative (comfort patient
only)
|
|
Incidence
of Vomiting
|
None
|
100 rads: 5%
200 rads: 50% |
75%
|
75%
|
100%
|
100%
|
Delay
Time
|
n/a
|
3 hours
|
2 hours
|
1 hour
|
3 min.
|
3 min.
|
Main
Organs Affected
|
None
|
Blood Forming Tissue
|
Gastro-intestinal Tract
|
Central Nervous System
|
||
Characteristic
Signs
|
None
|
White Blood Cell Decrease
|
Fatigue, infection, erythema,
sterilization, loss of hair above 300 rads, hemorrhage
|
Diarrhea, fever, electrolyte
imbalance, bleeding
|
Convulsion, coma, loss of muscle
control, lethargy, tremors
|
|
Critical
Period
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
4 – 6 weeks
|
5 – 14 days
|
1 – 48 hours
|
|
Post-exposure
Therapy
|
Assure of Safety
|
Blood analysis; assure of safety
|
Blood transfusion; anti-biotics
|
Possible bone marrow transplant
|
Maintain electrolyte balance
|
Sedatives
|
Outlook
|
Excellent
|
Excellent
|
Good
|
Guarded
|
Hopeless
|
Hopeless
|
Convalescent
Period
|
None
|
Several weeks
|
1 – 2 months
|
Long
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Death
Rate
|
None
|
None
|
0% - 40%
|
40% - 100%
|
90% - 100%
|
100%
|
Death
Within
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
2 – 4 weeks
|
2 weeks
|
2 days
|
|
Cause
of Death
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Hemorrhage, infection
|
Dehydration
|
Respiratory failure; heart attack
|
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