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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on June 19, 2008 1:07 PM.

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'Abundant health from radioactive waste'

By Hamish Johnston

Earlier this week I received a press release about a paper entitled 'Abundant health from radioactive waste', which was published today in the International Journal of Low Radiation.

Not surprisingly, this set the alarm bells ringing, but I couldn't resist following it up.

The paper is by Don Luckey who is Emeritus Professor of Biochemistry at the University of Missouri. Luckey is a proponent of "radiation hormesis" — the idea that small doses of radiation can actually be good for you, even if much larger doses will kill you.

In his paper, Luckey goes so far as to suggest that schools be built "in used nuclear power plants", and children be given sculptures that are impregnated with nuclear waste to boost their exposure to radiation (and their health). He does caution, "However, children should not ride [sculptures of] radioactive ponies for more than a few minutes every day".

I had never heard of radiation hormesis, so I got in touch with several health physicists in the UK and I was genuinely surprised to get a mixed verdict on the theory. Although they all agreed that hormesis was at the fringes of health physics, some did say that there could be something to it.

Indeed, I was told that the theory has a small but very vocal group of supporters, particularly in France, Japan and the US, who have been lobbying the International Commission on Radiological Protection to look into revising its Linear No-Threshold (LNT) principle. The LNT maintains that there is no exposure level below which radiation has no harmful effects (although these effects are extremely small at very low levels).

The reality is that it is very difficult to understand the effects — good or bad — of very low levels of radiation. As a result, the literature is full of seemingly conflicting reports and scientists who have a passionate belief in radiation hormesis can pick and choose studies that support the theory, while dismissing those that don't.

A case in point is the controversial 1995 study by Bernard Cohen, which suggested that people living in parts of the US with high levels of the radioactive gas radon tend to be less likely to die from lung cancer — strong evidence for radiation hormesis, according to Luckey. However, in 2003, Jerry Puskin showed that this could be explained by considering the different rates of smoking in these regions — something that Luckey seems to have ignored in his latest paper.

So, will my children be playing on a radioactive pony? I don't think so!

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Comments (7)

  • 1 howard long MD MPH June 19, 2008 7:03 PM

    Hormesis, benefit from small amounts of poison, applies to ionizing radiation, as thoroughly referenced in Radiation Hormesis, by Luckey. Johnson should read the thousands of epidemiologic, animal experiment and cellular studies.
    Is Radiation an Essential Trace Energy, John Cameron, shows just 0.76 mortality with 0.5rad extra in vast NSWS.
    I sit on thoriated welding rods, 0.800mR/hr supplement. HL

  • 2 Bernard L. Cohen June 19, 2008 9:22 PM

    I have published extensively on the issues raised by Hamish Johnson, and would be glad to send copies of my papers that respond to his blog to anyone interested. I am confident that they would convince most physicists that his blog is misleading.

  • 3 Ender June 19, 2008 10:31 PM

    Statistical results without having a clear picture of the mechanism which produces the mechanism are irrelevant. They can at most give you a hint of where to look for. Every scientist should know that.

  • 4 Dr. Bryan Dixon FRCPath.PhD., June 21, 2008 12:51 PM

    As a radiation biologist/Pathologist/scientist with 30 years active research in the field of radiation,cancer biology and treatment,it is reasonably clear from my viewpoint as to what the mechanism of Hormesis may be.

    Most normal cells can undergo proliferation in order to maintain the fuction of the tissue/organ in which they belong. They contain cellular DNA repair mechanisms or destruct mechanisms that eliminate them from the tissue if they have damaged DNA that cannot be repaired before they divide.
    If irradiation at low dose-levels produces non-leathal DNA damage, the intra-cellular repair genes are upregulated and the non leathal DNA damage is repaired, normally within a few hours. At the same time repair of other , non-radiation induced DNA oncogenic damage(eg. from virus,hormonal and chemical exposure) also takes place and it becomes less probable that the remaining cells in the irradiated tissue will undego malignant transformation than before reducing, all other factors remaining the same, cancer-risk in irradiated individuals and in turn, the irradiated population to which they belong, i.e. the cancer incidence will fall below "normal" levels following low dose -exposure, unless that population receives a threshold collective dose above which radiation exposure progessively damages these evolutionary developed cellular DNA repair processes.

    If the total damage(from all forms of "cellular envirnmental exposure)cannot be repaired then checkpoint genes will be up regulated to prevent cell division or indeed the cell may be eliminated by apoptosis(cell suicide).

    With respect to hormesis and apoptosis it should be remembered that all cellular based life evolved mostly in a much higher natural radiation background than we live in today!

  • 5 Nuclear lobby propaganda June 21, 2008 8:01 PM

    These articles are preparing the publicity to nuclear energy sources, which are expected to replace fossil fuel sources.

  • 6 Don Jennings June 23, 2008 4:41 AM

    What about the natural background radiation we have evolved in? It seems to me there already is a low level radiation from a lot of sources like that and like they said, radon, which is high here in the Pocono Mountains where I live in Pennsylvania. If Cohen's or Luckey's papers are right, we should have been reaping the benefits of low level radiation for the last several million years. How can you separate that from the statistics? Why didn't Cohen take into account the lower levels of smoking here in Pennsylvania?
    It would seem to me they would need confirmation on a molecular level, where are those studies?

  • 7 tom June 26, 2008 11:06 AM

    [...]If we are crazy, and there is no peak oil crash, then we will have plenty of food, we will have good lives, in a supportive and caring community of people who are devoted to treating the earth well, we will be debt free and will have found a way to treat each other at all times with respect.[...]

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