Module Seven Radiation Emergencies - ACMT€¦ · TICs & TIMs Module Seven – Radiation...

Post on 04-Aug-2020

3 views 1 download

Transcript of Module Seven Radiation Emergencies - ACMT€¦ · TICs & TIMs Module Seven – Radiation...

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs!

Training Support Package 1

Module Seven Radiation Emergencies

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

2 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Learning Objectives

•  Review key concepts: radiation types and exposure/dose

•  Identify where radiation is found •  Describe five potential major terrorist scenarios

involving radiation •  Describe clinical response strategies

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

3 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Where are Nuclear Materials Found

•  Irradiation facilities •  Nuclear reactors •  Materials testing •  X-ray devices •  Isotope production facilities •  Radionuclides used in

medicine/research •  ???????

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

4 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Devices Containing Radioactive Source Materials

•  Estimated 2 million devices in the USA contain licensed radioactive sources, but there is no comprehensive national inventory.

•  Companies have reported losing track of almost 1700 sources since 1998. More than half have yet to be found.

[Nuclear Threat Initiative, Monterrey Institute of International. Studies. 2003]

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

5 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Five major terrorist scenarios

1.  Surreptitious placement of a radiation source 2.  Stealth dispersal of radioactive material 3.  Explosive radiation dispersal (“dirty bomb”) 4.  Attack on a nuclear power plant 5.  Detonation of a nuclear weapon

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

6 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Surreptitious Placement of Radiological Source

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

7 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Malevolent Use of Radiation Guangdong Province, China 2002 •  A nuclear medicine expert who managed

a laser medical center got into a dispute with his partner.

•  He used forged papers to purchase an industrial device containing iridium-192, and placed the source in the ceiling of his partner's office.

•  The partner became ill within days, experiencing low white blood count, bleeding gums, fatigue, dizziness, nausea.

•  74 members of the hospital staff were also sickened before an inspection identified the source.

[www.cnn.com/2003/world/asiapcf/east/10/02/china.radiation]

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

8 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

(Stealth) Dispersal of Radioactive Material: Cesium-137 Radiation Accident

Goiania, Brazil (1987) •  On 9/13/87, two scavengers found abandoned

teletherapy device in abandoned medical clinic building. Device contained 1,375 Ci of Cesium-137.

•  Unit partially dismantled, then sold a few days later to a junkyard, where dealer used power tools to gain access to luminescent powder. Powder was distributed among relatives and neighbors.

•  11 heavily exposed people admitted to hospital over next 2 weeks, suffering from nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, and skin lesions. On 9/28/87, the illnesses were recognized as acute radiation syndrome and a major public health response was initiated.

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

9 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Goiania Radiation Accident •  Widespread population monitoring due to concern over water

contamination from junkyard run-off. •  112,000 surveyed for contamination •  249 contaminated

–  120 externally contaminated clothing –  129 externally and internally contaminated

•  46 received chelation with Prussian Blue •  20 required specific hospital treatment •  14 developed bone marrow depression •  8 treated with GM-CSF •  4 died due to hemorrhage and infection. •  Exposure was 4-6 Gy

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

10 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiological Dispersal Devices: “Dirty Bombs”

•  A relatively small conventional explosive may be able to disperse radiation from even a small source over many city blocks

•  However, if radiation is detected promptly, few individuals are likely to absorb a lethal dose before they can evacuate the area

•  In terms of human casualties, unlikely to be a “weapon of mass destruction.”

•  Radiation sickness will be limited to individuals who have ingested, inhaled, or otherwise internalized substantial amounts of the source

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

11 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Attack on a Nuclear Power Plant

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

12 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Chernobyl (April, 1986) The world’s largest example of a

“smoking disperser of radioactive material?”

•  134 Acute Radiation Syndrome victims, 48 with burns

•  28 Acute radiation injury deaths, plus 19 late deaths

•  Up to 4000 excess cancer deaths estimated among 600,000 heaviest exposed (liquidators, evacuees, nearby residents)

•  Source: WHO Chernobyl Forum 2006

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

13 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

What is Radiation?

•  Radiation is Energy •  This energy can be in the form of:

–  electromagnetic waves, or –  subatomic particles

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

14 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

What is Ionizing Radiation? •  Ionizing radiation has enough

energy to strip electrons off atom-all nuclear radiation is ionizing

•  Ionizing or “nuclear” radiation has the clear potential to “terrify” the public as it is associated with the destructive force of nuclear weapons

•  Invisible •  Undetectable to the senses

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

15 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

What is Non-ionizing Radiation •  Many other forms of

radiation are non-ionizing •  Examples:

–  UV –  Radio waves –  Microwaves –  Light

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

16 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Types of Ionizing Radiation •  Alpha

–  High energy “helium nucleus” •  Beta

–  High energy “electron” •  Gamma

–  Electromagnetic energy from within a nucleus

•  X-ray –  Electromagnetic energy from

outside a nucleus •  Neutron

–  Neutral particle emitted from the nucleus

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

17 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Different Types of Radiation

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

18 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiation vs Radioactive Material

•  Radiation –  Energy transported in the form of waves or particles (i.e

alpha, beta, gamma, or x-rays) •  Radioactive material

–  Materials that emit ionizing radiation

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

19 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Exposure

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

20 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Contamination (Internal or External)

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

21 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiation Terms •  Activity

–  Amount of disintegrations/sec –  Units: Curie or Becquerel

•  Absorbed dose –  Amount of energy deposited –  Units: rad or Gray

•  Dose equivalent –  Amount of biological damage/risk –  Units: rem or Sievert

Marie Curie

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

22 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiation Exposures •  Natural background radiation (annual average):

360 mrem •  Air travel round trip (London-New York):

4 mrem •  Chest X-ray:

10 mrem •  Smoking 1.5 packs/day x1 yr:

16,000 mrem •  Mild acute radiation sickness:

200,000 mrem •  LD50 for irradiation (w/i 60 days w/o treatment):

450,000 mrem

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

23 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Injuries Associated with Radiological Incidents

•  Acute Radiation Syndrome •  Localized radiation injuries •  Fetal effects •  Contamination •  Trauma

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

24 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

What Radiation Does Not Do

•  Immediate death •  Immediate burns/wounds •  Irradiation alone is not a medical emergency or

threat to medical providers •  Treat the patient first!

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

25 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS)

•  A group of signs and symptoms that develop after total body irradiation.

•  Generally requires high dose whole body exposure, at a high dose rate, to penetrating (e.g. gamma) radiation

•  More severe exposures lead to more rapid onset of symptoms and severity of illness

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

26 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Phases of Acute Radiation Syndrome

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

27 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Acute Radiation Syndrome

•  Subclinical •  Hematopoietic •  Cutaneous •  Gastrointestinal •  CNS

<100 rads >100 rads >300 rads >600 rads >3000 rads

Current nomenclature: 1 Grey (Gy) = 100 rads

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

28 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Hematopoietic Syndrome (1-5 Gy)

•  Manifests as fall in lymphocyte count •  Lymphocyte nadir typically 8-30 days post exposure •  Higher doses → earlier nadir •  Stem cells die, platelets are consumed •  Pancytopenia → death from sepsis, hemorrhage

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

29 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Prognosis

•  Prognosis poor above 6 Gy, and improbable > 8 Gy •  Gastrointestinal syndrome

–  Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea within 2 to 4 hours, lasting 2 days, followed by short latent phase (0 to 7 days). Then return of severe N, V, diarrhea, + fever, electrolyte imbalance, marrow suppression.

–  Death occurs within 1 to 2 weeks. •  Central Nervous System Syndrome

–  Onset within minutes to an hour of violent N, V, D, followed by confusion, fever, hypotension, convulsions, coma, and death within 48 hours.

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

30 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Diagnosis of ARS

•  History of possible exposure •  Note signs/symptoms & time to onset •  CBC w/ diff and follow every 4-6 hrs

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

31 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Diagnosis of ARS Various algorithms relate symptoms (vomiting) and lymphocyte

depletion kinetics (next slide) to management (e.g.) •  Time to vomiting not completely reliable at moderate doses

–  30% of patients exposed to 2 Gy vomit within 5 hours => admit to general hospital

–  90% of patients exposed to 6 Gy vomit within 1 hour => require urgent specialized care http://www.remm.nlm.gov/onsetvomiting.htm

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

32 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

(1) 300 rads (2) 440 rads (3) 560 rads (4) 710 rads

Patterns of Early Lymphocyte Response in Relation to Dose

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

33 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Localized Radiation Injury

•  One part of the body receives higher dose than rest of the body

•  Diagnosis is difficult •  ARS may or may not be present

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

34 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Localized Radiation Injury

300 rads

600 rads

1000 rads

2000 rads

>5000 rads

•  Epilation starting on day 17

•  Erythema starting mins to weeks

•  Dry desquamation

•  Moist desquamation in 2-3 weeks

•  Necrosis and deep ulceration

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

35 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Local Radiation Diagnosis

•  History •  Amount of tissue injury = retrospective dosimeter •  Accident mock-up = prospective dosimeter

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

36 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Treatment for Local Injury •  Pain control •  Avoid nicotine •  Prevent/treat infections •  Surgical treatment for necrosis •  Hyperbaric oxygen therapy may

have a role in improving healing •  Problems

–  Wounds evolve slowly –  Healing is extremely prolonged

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

37 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Fetal Radiation Exposure

•  Human embryo and fetus highly sensitive to ionizing radiation

•  Effects depend on dose and stage of gestation •  Uterine absorption 0.2 – 0.5 Sv: •  1st week post-conception risks lethality •  2-7 wks risks congenital abnormality •  8-15 weeks risks mental retardation

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

38 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Contamination •  Standard medical triage

(ABC’s) is the highest priority

•  Radiation exposure and contamination are secondary considerations

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

39 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Contamination

“When workers at Chernobyl who were in the reactor area at the time of the nuclear accident were decontaminated, the medical personnel at the site received less than 1 rad of radiation.”

Mettler and Voelz, New England Journal of Medicine, 2002; 346: 1554-61

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

40 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Protecting Staff from Contamination

•  Use standard precautions •  Survey hands and clothing frequently •  Replace contaminated gloves or clothing •  Keep the work area free of contamination

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

41 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Contamination Control

Hot Zone!

Warm Zone!

Cold Zone!

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

42 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Patient Decontamination •  Remove and bag the patient’s clothing and personal

belongings (this typically removes 80 - 90% of contamination) •  Handle foreign objects with care until proven non-radioactive

with survey meter •  Survey patient and collect samples

- Survey face, hands and feet - Survey rest of body

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

43 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Decontamination of Skin •  Use multiple gentle efforts •  Use soap & water •  Cut hair if necessary (do not

shave) •  Promote sweating •  Use survey meter

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

44 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Decontamination of Wounds •  Contaminated wounds:

–  Irrigate and gently scrub with surgical sponge –  Debride surgically only as needed

•  Contaminated thermal burns: –  Gently rinse –  Changing dressings will remove additional contamination –  Avoid overly aggressive decontamination

–  Change dressings frequently

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

45 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Internal Contamination

•  Radioactive material may enter the body through –  Inhalation –  Ingestion –  Wounds

•  Internal contamination generally does not cause early signs or symptoms

•  Internal contamination will continue to irradiate the patient

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

46 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Specific Therapy for Internal Contamination

Radionucleotide Therapy

Tritium Dilutional Iodine-125, 131 Potassium Iodide Strontium-89 Aluminum Phosphate

Cesium-137, Thallium Prussian Blue Plutonium, Americium, Curium DTPA

Unknown Charcoal / Lavage

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

47 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Prussian Blue - Radiogardase® (ferric hexacyanoferrate)

•  Pharmaceutical chelator that forms high affinity, nonabsorbable complexes with cesium and thallium

•  After oral administration, diminishes intestinal Cs absorption, or interrupts enterohepatic or enteroenteric circulation, accelerating elimination in the feces

•  Approved by FDA in 2003 for treatment of contamination with radioactive cesium (137Cs)

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

48 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Ca-DTPA Trisodium Calcium (diethylenetriaminepentaacetate)

•  Approved as an I.V. chelating agent for individuals with internal contamination with plutonium, americium, and curium. Aerosol administration also possible

•  Can bind to radioactive atoms and accelerate their elimination in the urine

•  Treatment is most effective if begun promptly, I.e. within hours of first exposure. If treatment is begun after 24 hours, Zn-DTPA should be used if available.

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

49 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Immediate Medical Management

•  Triage –  ARS –  localized/ cutaneous –  combined injury

•  Initial stabilization and treatment

•  Psychological effects •  Record keeping/ Dose

assessment

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

50 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Consult with Radiation Experts

•  Consult with Radiation Safety Officer or Health Physicist: –  Determining/documenting presence of radioactivity,

activity levels, and radiation dose –  Collecting samples to document contamination –  Assisting in decontamination procedures –  Disposing of radioactive waste

•  REAC/TS phone number 865-576-1005

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

51 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radioactive Isotopes as Delayed-Onset Toxins

The saga of Alexander Litvinenko

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

52 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Background on Polonium-210

Alpha-emitters characteristics •  High-energy and severely damage genetic material

–  Po-210 especially high-energy, gives off 5,000 times more alpha particles than does the same amount of radium

•  Penetrate short distances – only harmful to humans through inhalation, ingestion, or contact with open wounds

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

53 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Litvinenko Case Timeline Nov. 1st, 2006

–  Meets with two Russian men at a restaurant, one an Italian security expert –  Litvinenko hospitalized that very same day –  British toxicologist suggests thallium poisoning

•  Italian Senator Paolo Guzzanti, former head of a parliamentary commission examining past cases of KGB infiltration, said that Litvinenko was considered a traitor by enemies in the Kremlin and a helper of traitors, i.e. the Chechens.

•  On his deathbed, the patient blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for the poisoning, a charge Putin strongly denied. He died 11/23, just over 3 weeks post-exposure.

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

54 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiation Exposure: History Clues

•  Finding an unknown metallic object. •  Working with fluorescence spectroscopy, industrial

radiography, etc. •  Family history of several family members or close

friends with skin lesions and a history of nausea, vomiting and fatigue.

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

55 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Radiation Exposure: Exam Clues •  Skin ulceration, skin peeling (desquamation), skin redness

(erythema), loss of hair or abnormal sweating of an area of skin

•  Unexplained infections or bleeding, particularly in the gums or gastrointestinal tract.

•  Weight loss, diarrhea, fluid or electrolyte imbalance, kidney failure.

•  Shock •  Confusion, disorientation, brain edema, loss of coordination

(ataxia), seizures, or coma (1-2 days after severe exposure).

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

56 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Audience Response

When caring for patients exposed to high levels of radiation, it is important to understand that:

1.  They are radioactive and pose a significant risk to providers 2.  Seriously injured patients must first be decontaminated. 3.  Providers must be decontaminated before emergency care is given 4.  They are not necessarily radioactive and pose little health risk to

others

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

57 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs

58 Module Seven – Radiation Emergencies

Key Points

•  Stabilization is the highest priority •  Radiation experts should be consulted •  Training and drills should be offered •  Adequate supplies and survey instruments should

be stocked •  Standard precautions reduce contamination •  Early symptoms and their intensity indicate the

severity of the radiation injury

Chemical Agents of Opportunity for Terrorism: TICs & TIMs!

Training Support Package 59

Questions?