Radiation
hormesis and the radiological imperative
Editorial opinion by Dr. Gerald L. Looney, MPH
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In the beginning, the earth was without formulas or physicists, and was purely
a product of nuclear physics. Today, however, few seem to be aware that the
greatest contributions of this reputedly new science are actually ancient history,
since they occurred at the beginning of the universe 13.7 billion years ago,
remaining unknown and unacknowledged until the past century, when mankind finally
discovered this most elemental of all sciences.
Predictably, with its "discovery," nuclear physics was labeled a new
science and presumed to be somewhat manmade and under man's dominion and control.
Hasty scientific hypothesis and public dogma held that nuclear phenomena with
ionizing radiation were hazardous at any level, and that humans must be shielded
and protected from this "new" hazard. The very idea is ironic, since
the truth of the matter is that man is a product of nuclear energy, not vice
versa. Now, this less familiar, but more accurate reality, will form the basis
of discussion.
Later pertinent findings in astrophysics as well as in the medical sciences
have been announced piecemeal and as scattered reports to a variety of audiences.
As a result they have never grabbed worldwide attention as vividly and singularly
as the atomic bombs in World War II, a time when man seemed to claim control
of his destiny, for better or worse. Unfortunately, at that point man turned
to hasty assumptions based on very limited information, assumptions he has been
loath to revise or reject even in the face of refuting data.
While generations of students and scientists have learned about radioactive
decay and the half-lives of various radioactive elements and isotopes, virtually
no one has turned the telescope around and discussed or documented the reverse
view: The same number of half-life years taken back into the past produces a
double-life, a doubling of radioactivity for these elements, and an incremental
terrestrial background level many times higher than today's levels.
The Big Bang nearly 14 billion years ago at the formation of the universe transformed
energy into matter and produced a profusion of simple hydrogen atoms, which
still populate the earth and universe to this day. Along the way, these atoms
served as the building blocks of subsequent larger elements, including vital
carbon and oxygen.
Nonetheless, 10 billion years passed before the first life forms appeared on
earth. Part of this delay was undoubtedly due to the early inhospitality of
this planet to the initial generation of life, as well as to the subsequent
preservation and propagation of primitive single-cell organisms. However, there
was another essential biologic requirement for these early simple organisms:
the need to tolerate and adapt to the inherent risk factors of early Earth,
such as ionizing radiation, a sort of radiological imperative necessary for
life.
The possibility of such an imperative was never considered by science or society
following the new and startling discovery of these mysterious rays, and it was
arbitrarily decreed that ionizing radiation is intrinsically dangerous at even
the lowest levels. To guard against any risk or hazard, scientists settled on
the linear no-threshold (LNT) hypothesis for radiation protection by extrapolating
risk data from high-level exposure down through lower levels all the way down
to zero exposure -- a level which has never existed on earth except in specially
shielded containers with artificial environments.
And this is the biggest surprise and best-kept secret of all: a man isolated
in such a chamber and secure from extrinsic background radiation would still
experience significant intrinsic irradiation from himself. The human body, rather
than being a chaste and inviolate vessel of biologic purity devoid of and unpenetrated
by ionizing radiation, is actually its own radioactive repository and beehive
of ionizing rays, with an intrinsic level of nearly 9,000 Bq (disintegrations
per second) for the average 150-pound human.
At this level, the body is experiencing a million ionizing rays every two minutes,
30 million per hour, and three-quarter billion per day. Thus, if a nuclear-power
worker and his family were "protected" in some hypothetical shielded
environment, he would still receive more ionizing radiation from snuggling next
to a sleeping spouse for eight hours than he receives from a full eight-hour
shift at work.
This defies the original popular image of the human body as a radiosterile structure,
and the resulting widespread assumption that any ionizing ray within this structure
represents an isolated disruptive burst of thunder and lightning, which blasts
and damages biologic tissue, and leaves a smoldering scar waiting to later burst
into a consuming fire of malignant destruction. A more accurate view is that
these radioactive rays represent the steady spark of nature's ignition in a
smoothly running biologic engine. Early life on this planet swam in an ocean
of ionizing radiation, and this invisible ocean has clearly not disappeared
even though it has receded.
The original naive assumption has been that life on this planet was safe and
secure from these odorless, tasteless, and invisible radiological phenomena
until they were released from the genie's bottle by Wilhelm Roentgen, and later
tracked by the Curies, as well as many others, using cloud chambers, photographic
film, and other detection devices in the past century.
However, facts indicate the exact opposite: Man's psyche may have been exposed
to the reality of ionizing radiation for the first time in 1896, but his soma
has been bombarded for eons by retrogressively higher levels of natural background
radiation, punctuated by episodes of extraterrestrial radiation from exploding
supernovae and occasional hypernovae, as well as evolving solar activity.
According to the LNT hypothesis, such levels should have sterilized the earth
and eradicated all life. Instead, radiation may have produced multiple new mutations
in existing life forms, with the negative disadvantageous mutations disappearing
rapidly, and the positive advantageous mutations prospering and propagating.
Indeed, it seems likely that this radiological imperative was a significant
factor in the evolution of all species.
Quickly following in the footsteps of Roentgen, British radiologists/radiotherapists
formed the world's first radiological society and began registering members
in 1897, monitoring one of the oldest occupational groups exposed to ionizing
radiation. Because they had equipment to generate higher levels of radiation
than laboratory researchers utilizing natural ores of radium compounds and pitchblende,
these early radiologists received greater exposures (protection was unheard
of) and were one of the first groups to recognize skin burns and other negative
effects of excessive exposure.
Nearly a quarter-century later, in 1921, the first radiological protection standards
were published -- standards that were later reviewed and made periodically more
stringent for all occupations. The original increase in initial radiologist
cancers, which was not manifested for several decades, declined rapidly with
protection and decreased exposure. For members registered after 1954, no increase
in malignancies could be found and a hint of decreased cancer risk began to
be noted.
This hint was quickly forgotten in the furor over the atmospheric testing of
atomic bombs, and some scientists launched a crusade against all things which
might have radioactive potential, not realizing that they were condemning and
rejecting their own species and birthrights. Aided and abetted by the pressures
and manipulations of the Cold War, it became politically correct and acceptable
for science to practice discrimination and disinformation for this part of the
electromagnetic spectrum.
We wrongly assumed that life on earth never knew radioactive sin until man brought
it on himself, that zero-exposure was the historical rule, not the exception,
and that elimination of future exposure should be the ultimate goal of humanity
at home, at work, and eventually in space. Such zeal for a radiation-free environment
could lead in the future to actual radiation deficiency, since living organisms
depend on low-level exposure to stimulate immune system functioning.
This current zeal for zero-tolerance of radiation is reminiscent of the puritanical
efforts of early missionaries visiting South Sea Islands for the first time.
Because of their zero-tolerance for alcoholic beverages, these newcomers coerced
the natives into giving up their fermented home-brews containing many natural
nutrients, which eventually led to deficiency states of several vitamins and
minerals. Inadvertently, these missionaries documented the Law of Unintended
Consequences -- and helped pave the road to hell with their good intentions.
It has already been documented that nuclear workers with additional low-level
exposures (LLE) have statistically significant longer life spans and lower cancer
incidences than matched-control workers without the LLE. Our current radiation
antipathy and LNT hypothesis would never predict this result, so this unexpected
improvement for exposed workers continues to be largely ignored and unacknowledged.
An Internet search for "radiation hormesis" produces a wealth of positive
information, information that is almost completely lacking in prior and current
medical textbooks and physics publications.
If the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Project is someday successful,
and we obtain feedback from an observer on a distant planet, the observations
may be rather startling. ET may find our behavior puzzling and humorous, laughing
at our fixation on stone tools, iron implements and petroleum products, but
perplexed by our abhorrence of the oldest and most universal energy of all,
nuclear energy.
This unearthly observer might compare earthlings' behavior following the recent
discovery of nuclear physics with their earlier ancestral discovery of fire.
When man's first encounter with lightning-induced forest fires resulted in the
infliction of numerous fatalities and scores of survivors with severe burns
and scars, Homo erectus initially feared greatly this frightening new phenomenon
and ordered all of his tribe to avoid the flickering flames to prevent future
death and disfigurement.
Only subsequent generations were able to overcome this phobia and learn to control
this once-fearsome demon for everyone's comfort and benefit. Let us hope that
history can indeed repeat itself and learn from the beginning.
By Dr. Gerald L. Looney, MPH
AuntMinnie.com contributing writer
March 21, 2003
Dr. Gerald Looney is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore
and the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston. He has held medical faculty
positions at Harvard University, Boston University, the University of Arizona
in Tucson, and the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. He is currently
an associate clinical professor of medicine/occupational medicine at the University
of California, Irvine College of Medicine. He recently retired as medical director
of Boeing's military transport division in Long Beach, CA, and currently serves
on the Department of Energy's (DOE) physician review panel to examine cases
of workers from earlier nuclear facilities who might have occult work-related
illness.
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