Literature DB >> 11768794

Estimates of radiological risk from depleted uranium weapons in war scenarios.

Marco Durante1, Mariagabriella Pugliese.   

Abstract

Several weapons used during the recent conflict in Yugoslavia contain depleted uranium, including missiles and armor-piercing incendiary rounds. Health concern is related to the use of these weapons, because of the heavy-metal toxicity and radioactivity of uranium. Although chemical toxicity is considered the more important source of health risk related to uranium, radiation exposure has been allegedly related to cancers among veterans of the Balkan conflict, and uranium munitions are a possible source of contamination in the environment. Actual measurements of radioactive contamination are needed to assess the risk. In this paper, a computer simulation is proposed to estimate radiological risk related to different exposure scenarios. Dose caused by inhalation of radioactive aerosols and ground contamination induced by Tomahawk missile impact are simulated using a Gaussian plume model (HOTSPOT code). Environmental contamination and committed dose to the population resident in contaminated areas are predicted by a food-web model (RESRAD code). Small values of committed effective dose equivalent appear to be associated with missile impacts (50-y CEDE < 5 mSv), or population exposure by water-independent pathways (50-y CEDE < 80 mSv). The greatest hazard is related to the water contamination in conditions of effective leaching of uranium in the groundwater (50-y CEDE < 400 mSv). Even in this worst case scenario, the chemical toxicity largely predominates over radiological risk. These computer simulations suggest that little radiological risk is associated to the use of depleted uranium weapons.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11768794     DOI: 10.1097/00004032-200201000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Phys        ISSN: 0017-9078            Impact factor:   1.316


  4 in total

1.  Leaching of depleted uranium in soil as determined by column experiments.

Authors:  W Schimmack; U Gerstmann; U Oeh; W Schultz; P Schramel
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2005-10-06       Impact factor: 1.925

2.  Investigations on the solubility of corrosion products on depleted uranium projectiles by simulated body fluids and the consequences on dose assessment.

Authors:  Udo C Gerstmann; Wilfried Szymczak; Vera Höllriegl; Wei Bo Li; Paul Roth; Peter Schramel; Shinji Takenaka; Uwe Oeh
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2007-11-16       Impact factor: 1.925

3.  Long-term corrosion and leaching of depleted uranium (DU) in soil.

Authors:  W Schimmack; U Gerstmann; W Schultz; G Geipel
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2007-06-05       Impact factor: 1.925

4.  Uranium directly interacts with the DNA repair protein poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1.

Authors:  Xixi Zhou; Bingye Xue; Sebastian Medina; Scott W Burchiel; Ke Jian Liu
Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 4.219

  4 in total

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