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Potassium Iodate and
“Dirty
Bombs”
by Jim English
On June 8, 2002, Westchester County, New York
officials began to distribute potassium iodine tablets to thousands
of residents living within a 10-mile radius of the nearby Indian
Point nuclear power plant. (1) The pills, also known as “KI,”
prevent the thyroid gland from absorbing radiation released from
nuclear weapons and nuclear power plants if taken within 24-hours
of exposure. Following New York’s lead, twelve other states,
including Maryland and Vermont, also requested anti-radiation pills
from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to distribute to residents
living near nuclear reactors.
Waiting in line with his two young daughters for
their free anti-radiation pills, Westchester County resident Joseph
Ruffino told the Associated Press that the whole thing was kind
of surreal. “It's hard to believe this is your daily reality
these days, but it is.” (2)
More than a decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union the danger
of the intentional use of radiation against civilians is greater
than at any other time since the end of the Cold War. After a pair
of hijacked commercial jetliners toppled the Twin Towers on September
11, 2001, engineers scrambled frantically to reassess the integrity
of nuclear power plants. Their report, delivered to a special meeting
of the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) convened in
Vienna on November 1, 2001, stated that the world’s 1,300
nuclear facilities were vulnerable and not hardened to withstand
“acts of war,” such as a deliberate attack with a large,
fully-fueled passenger jet. This grim assessment led IAEA's director
general, Mohammed ElBaradei, to state that, “There is no sanctuary
any more, no safety zone.” (3)
In response to this threat and follow-up advisories
from US Nuclear Regulatory Commission regarding potential terrorist
attacks against nuclear power plants, the FBI temporarily closed
the air space around all US nuclear power plants in October 2001.
(4) Currently the FAA and US military constantly monitor air traffic
in proximity to nuclear plants and, while unwilling to expose details
that might tip potential attackers, they’are believed to have
contingency plans in place for immediate response if a threat is
perceived. (5)
In addition to attacks against nuclear power plants a new radiological
threat in the form of a “dirty bomb” has entered the
modern terror lexicon. Unlike standard nuclear devices a dirty bomb
uses conventional explosives, such as dynamite, to spread airborne
radiation and contamination across populated areas. Particularly
disturbing is the fact that the only way to distinguish a dirty
bomb explosion from a regular explosion is to wait until high radiation
levels are detected.
Also troubling is the fact that dirty bombs don’t
require expensive manufacturing facilities or specialized talents
to assemble. In fact, the hardest part in building a dirty bomb
is acquiring the radioactive material. (6)
Dirty bombs are not weapons of mass destruction,
but weapons of mass disruption. “Claims of thousands of deaths
are likely to be exaggerated, but there would be a severe contamination
problem and a lot of panic,” says Michael Clark of Britain's
National Radiological Protection Board. (7)
On June 2, 2002 the IAEA issued warnings about the existence of
millions of radiation sources that terrorists could easily turn
into bombs. (8) The IAEA also reported that controls to prevent
radiological materials from being stolen are weak. Such radiological
materials include weapons-grade plutonium and uranium, as well as
freshly spent nuclear fuel. Also easily available are cobalt 60,
strontium 90 and cesium 137—lethal radioactive materials used
extensively in equipment found in hospitals, factories and laboratories.
And while concerns about unprotected radiological
materials in countries such as the former Soviet republics, Pakistan,
India and other developing nations is particularly high, Western
sources are also doing a poor job of monitoring these lethal substances.
According to the IAEA, US companies have lost over 1,500 radiation
sources since 1996, and more than half of these have never been
recovered. In Europe another 30,000 sources of material are “at
risk of being lost from regulatory control,” and up to 70
radiation sources are lost every year. “Security is as good
as its weakest link and loose nuclear material in any country is
a potential threat to the entire world,” says ElBaradei. (8)
To date the only known attempt by terrorists to set off a dirty
bomb occurred in 1996, after Chechen rebels planted a device containing
radioactive cesium 137 in a Moscow park. Fortunately, there was
no explosion. More recently, on January 1, 2003, Britain's government
confirmed that it had evidence gleaned from documents discovered
in the Afghan city of Herat showing that al-Qaeda had successfully
constructed a dirty bomb. (9) This report was followed as recently
as February 6, 2003, when intelligence sources in the US suggested
that al-Qaeda was close to developing a dirty bomb and warned that
major attacks could be launched against Western targets within weeks.
(10)
If authorities have advance warning of a strike on a particular
place, they will try to evacuate the population. If time doesn’t
allow for evacuation, urging people to hide in basements and other
underground spots might save lives.
Following a nuclear or dirty bomb explosion the
first immediate priority of local and state authorities will be
the evacuation and treatment of the wounded, many of whom will die
without immediate medical care. Government and medical guidelines
direct that potassium iodide should be given immediately, especially
to children, pregnant women, and nursing mothers, to prevent the
destruction of the thyroid or the later development of thyroid cancer—the
incidence of which rose sharply among survivors of the Soviet Union’s
Chernobyl nuclear disaster, especially in children. (4) (Potassium
iodide provides little if any protection against other types of
radiation, for which there are no known protective agents.)
Following a nuclear disaster one of the greatest dangers is the
release of gases containing a radioactive form of iodine that is
readily taken-up by the thyroid gland. Exposure to radioactive iodine
leads to thyroid cancer and death. Standard treatment to prevent
radiation-induced damage to the thyroid is to immediately treat
victims with potassium iodide tablets to block absorption of radioactive
iodine isotopes. (11) Iodine tablets, in the form of potassium iodide,
are commonly used in cases of radiation exposure and are often distributed
to people who live around nuclear power plants in case of an accident.
In 1997, as a safety measure, the French government began to distribute
iodide tablets in advance to populations living near nuclear power
plants, to avoid having to do so in an emergency. (12) And in England
officials have taken steps to distribute potassium iodide tablets
to residents living near a nuclear submarine construction facility.
(13) Potassium iodide tablets were also used extensively to treat
the victims of the Chernobyl accident. (4)
Potassium iodate is an iodine-rich salt that is more stable, and
has a longer shelf life, than potassium iodide. Potassium iodate
has been shown to be as effective as potassium iodide in protecting
the thyroid gland from exposure to radioactive iodine following
a nuclear accident. (14) This was of special interest to Indian
scientists because of potassium iodate’s greater shelf life,
particularly in hot and humid climates. When researchers in Bombay
gave potassium iodate to animals they found that potassium iodate
is just as effective as iodide at blocking radioactive iodine from
entering the thyroid.
The following doses should be taken as a single dose within 3 hours
of exposure, or up to 10 hours after exposure, although this is
less effective:
- Adults : 2 capsules
- Children aged 3-12 years: 1 capsule
- Infants : 1 mo. to 3 years, 1/2 capsule
- Newborns to 1 mo., 1/4 capsule.
Note: Dosages may be crushed and taken mixed with
milk or water.
While potassium iodate can be taken by a majority of people without
any problems, it should only be used in case of a nuclear emergency.
Doses in excess of the single (one time only) daily dose listed
above should be taken only upon recommendation by a physician or
public health authority. Patients should notify their doctor if
taking quinidine, captopril, or enalopril, or are sensitive to iodine,
or suffer from dermatitis herpetiformis, thyrotoxicosis or kidney
problems before taking potassium iodate (or any thyroid blocker).
References
1. www.westchestergov.com/currentnews/potassiumiodidedoc.htm
2. www.cnn.com/2002/US/06/08/nuclear.plant.pills
3. www.newscientist.com/hottopics/tech/ article.jsp@id=99991470
4. Council on Foreign Relations Terrorism Report. http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/news/
archive/01-112.html
5. U.S. Nuclear Plants After September 11. http://www.princeton.edu/~jwuthnow/JP2-text.htm
6. http://www.terrorismanswers.com/weapons/ dirtybomb2.html
7. www.newscientist.com/hottopics/bioterrorism/bioterrorism.jsp@id=ns99992455_250A
8. Deadly Soviet caesium is missing. New Scientist, June 2002. www.NewScientist.com
news service
9. Al-Qaida likely built dirty bomb. Chicago Sun-Times, Feb. 1,
2003. http://www.suntimes.com/output/terror/cst-nws-bomb01.html
10. Al-Qaeda close to creating a 'dirty bomb.' The Scotsman, Friday
February 7, 2003. http://uk.news.yahoo.com/ 030207/17/dsisy.html.
11. Bacher K, Brans B, Monsieurs M, De Winter F, Dierckx RA, Thierens
H. Thyroid uptake and radiation dose after (131)I-lipiodol treatment:
is thyroid blocking by potassium iodide necessary? Eur J Nucl Med
Mol Imaging. 2002 Oct;29(10):1311-6.
12. Le Guen B, Hemidy PY, Garcier. French approach for the distribution
of iodine tablets in the vicinity of nuclear power plants. Health
Phys. 2002 Aug;83(2):293-300.
13. Astbury J, Horsley S, Gent N. Evaluation of a scheme for the
pre-distribution of stable iodine (potassium iodate) to the civilian
population residing within the immediate countermeasures zone of
a nuclear submarine construction facility. J Public Health Med.
1999 Dec;21(4):412-4.
14. Pahuja DN, Rajan MG, Borkar AV, Samuel AM. Potassium iodate
and its comparison to potassium iodide as a blocker of 131I uptake
by the thyroid in rats. Health Phys. 1993 Nov;65(5):545-9. |