| Literature DB >> 22247595 |
Kazunori Anzai1, Nobuhiko Ban, Toshihiko Ozawa, Shinji Tokonami.
Abstract
On March 11, 2011, an earthquake led to major problems at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. A 14-m high tsunami triggered by the earthquake disabled all AC power to Units 1, 2, and 3 of the Power Plant, and carried off fuel tanks for emergency diesel generators. Despite many efforts, cooling systems did not work and hydrogen explosions damaged the facilities, releasing a large amount of radioactive material into the environment. In this review, we describe the environmental impact of the nuclear accident, and the fundamental biological effects, acute and late, of the radiation. Possible medical countermeasures to radiation exposure are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Fukushima nuclear power plant; environmental contamination; low dose effect; nuclear accident; radiation mitigator; reactive oxygen species
Year: 2011 PMID: 22247595 PMCID: PMC3246178 DOI: 10.3164/jcbn.D-11-00021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Biochem Nutr ISSN: 0912-0009 Impact factor: 3.114
Fukushima Daiichi event sequence (March 11 through 15)
| Date | Time | Events |
|---|---|---|
| March 11 | 2:46 p.m. | A 9.0 magnitude earthquake strikes. Ground acceleration triggers automatic shutdown of all three reactors in operation. |
| 3:42 p.m. | A 14-meter tsunami triggered by the earthquake disables all AC power to Units 1, 2 and 3. | |
| 3:45 p.m. | Fuel tanks for emergency diesel generators are carried off by the tsunami. | |
| 4:46 p.m. | Water injection fails in the emergency core cooling systems of Units 1 and 2. | |
| March 12 | 9:07 p.m. | A pressure relief valve is opened on the Unit 1 pressure vessel. |
| 3:36 p.m. | A hydrogen explosion damages the structure of the Unit 1 reactor building. | |
| 8:20 p.m. | Seawater injection to the Unit 1 pressure vessel begins. | |
| 5:58 a.m. | Water injection fails in the emergency core cooling system of Unit 3. | |
| March 13 | 9:20 a.m. | A pressure relief valve is opened on the Unit 3 pressure vessel. |
| 4:46 p.m. | Water injection fails in the emergency core cooling systems of Unit 1 and 2. | |
| 11:01 a.m. | A hydrogen explosion damages the external structure of the Unit 3 reactor building. | |
| March 14 | 1:25 p.m. | The water level in the Unit 2 pressure vessel is found to be low, leading operators to conclude that the reactor cooling system is no longer functional. |
| 4:34 p.m. | Seawater injection into the Unit 2 pressure vessel begins. | |
| 6:20 a.m. | An explosion sound is heard at Unit 2 and it concluded to indicate an abnormality in the pressure suppression pool. At the same time, part of a wall in the operation area of Unit 4 is damaged. | |
| 9:38 a.m. | A fire breaks out in the Unit 4 reactor building. | |
| March 15 | 12:29 p.m. | The unit 4 fire is extinguished. |
Fig. 1Screening test carried out by Hirosaki University staff.
Fig. 2Expressway survey route for measuring dose rates in air from Hirosaki City to Fukushima City. Temporal variation of dose rates in air before and after the start of the Fukushima NPS crisis.
Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd. Scientific Reports 1, Article number 87, Figure 1, 7 September 2011, online only, copyright 2011.
Fig. 3Time-dependent process of biological effects after exposure of radiation.
Yield of primary products generated from radiolysis of water
| Product | G value |
|---|---|
| eaq− | 2.7 |
| •H | 0.55 |
| •OH | 2.7 |
| H2 | 0.45 |
| H2O2 | 0.7 |
| H2O+ | 2.7 |
Doses and effects on exposure to ionizing radiation
| Dose (mSv) | Effect |
|---|---|
| 0.1–0.3 | chest X-ray |
| 3–4 | world average dose per year of exposure to radiation |
| 0.6–2.7 | stomach radiography |
| 7–20 | CT scan |
| 50 | dose limit per year among radiation workers |
| 200 | lifetime exposure to natural radiation |
| 500 | decrease in lymphocytes, cataracts |
| 1000 | acute radiation damage, nausea, vomiting |
| 2000 | 5% of those exposed die within several weeks |
| 3000–5000 | 50% of those exposed die within several weeks |
| 7000–10000 | 95% of those exposed die within several weeks |
| 20000–60000 | cerebral edema, respiratory distress, diarrhea, fever, circulatory failure within 1–2 weeks |
| 100000 | instant coma, death within hours |
Fig. 4Dose response for the health effects of radiation. A: Adverse tissue reactions (deterministic effects). B: Cancer and heritable effects (stochastic effects).
Fig. 5Possible dose response curves for cancer induction at low doses. A: supralinear, B: LNT (linear non-threshold), C: threshold, D: hormetic.
Fig. 6Classification of radiation modifiers with respect to timing of administration.