7. Suppose a certain poison kills human cells by blocking pores in the nuclear membrane. Explain…
Gamma rays will penetrate paper, skin, wood, and other substances. Like alpha and beta particles, they are also harmful if inhaled, ingested or absorbed. To protect yourself from gamma rays, you need a shield at least as thick as a concrete wall. This type of radiation causes severe damage to your internal organs. Small quantities of radioactive materials occur naturally in the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, and in our own bodies. People receive some background radiation exposure each day from the sun, from radioactive elements in soil and rocks, from household appliances such as television sets and microwave ovens, and from medical and dental x-rays. Even the human body itself emits radiation. These levels of natural and background radiation are normal. Radiation 's health effects can be mild, such as reddening of the skin, or very serious, such as cancer or early death. Radioactive materials dispersed in an urban area pose a serious health hazard. Strong sources of gamma rays can cause acute radiation poisoning or even fatalities at high doses. Long-term exposure to low levels of gamma…
13. With ____________________, high-energy rays are used to damage cancer cells and prevent them from growing and reproducing.…
Toxicology is defined as that branch of science dealing with poisons. According to Hodgson (2010), a “poison can be defined as any substance that causes a harmful effect when administered, either by accident or by design, to a living organism” (p. 3). Toxicology also includes the study of harmful effects caused by physical phenomena, such as radiation of various kinds, noise,” and “the study of the detection, occurrence, properties, effects, and regulation of toxic substances,” (Hodgson, 2010, p. 3). Rarely defined as a single molecular event, toxicity involves a cascade of events, which start with exposure, and proceeds through distribution and metabolism, and ends with the interaction of cellular macromolecules (such as DNA, or protein) and the expression of a toxic endpoint (Hodgson, 2010).…
Radiation is the most commonly linked environmental factor in the development of cancers. The most convincing evidence linking radiation and the development of leukemia is research conducted after the Hiroshima…
A. Harm from chemical exposure depends on the amount of exposure (dose), frequency of exposure, which chemical is exposed, the body’s detoxification system, and one’s genetic makeup.…
Radiation consists of using high doses of radiation to kill the cancer cells. What radiation does to the cancer cell is that it causes chemical changes that destabilize DNA, the genetic code that tells a cell how to grow, reproduce and die. Doctors need to be extra careful with radiation because it can also kill good healthy cells. To protect good cells from getting harmed, doctors need to be as precise as possible when aiming radiation. Doctors also limit the amount of radiation administered in a patient, depending on the goal of treatment and the organs around the area that is to be treated, (Bernard, 2006).…
Are generally considered to be materials that cause death, disease, or birth defects in organisms that ingest or absorb them. The quantities and exposures necessary to cause these effects can vary widely.…
It’s also very high for human body as head CT scan has only 2 millisieverts. To know exact finding for the radiation we have to know about tooth enamel as per Nori Nakamura. It’s not so easy to find the intact tooth and the rain fell after the bombing how much radiation it brought with it, how can we know about it. Radiation not just affects the DNA directly, it also affects the cell machinery and alters the genes on and off programming which leads to the uncontrolled production of proteins. Sometimes the cell beside the damaged cell kills it for the protection of the mechanism. Researchers are indicating that low radiation unlikely to harmful and even protects from higher rates of radiation collected later by triggering the genes need in radiation defense. Many researchers have made the foundation and observe the people who are generally exposed to the lower radiation. Low radiation has become now a regular process. It was named the research as “million worker study”. I have come to know many things in this assignment like new terminology, new…
“Common biochemical themes are important to understanding cell injury and cell death regardless of the injuring agent” (Heuther & McCance, 2012). Cellular injury arises when a cell is unable to sustain homeostasis. The injury can be reversed if the cell can recover from whatever damage was done but if it does not recover the cell will die. The three common forms of cell injury are hypoxic injury, free radicals and reactive oxygen species injury, and chemical injury.…
* Exposure to radiation. People exposed to very high levels of radiation, such as survivors of a nuclear reactor accident, have an increased risk of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia.…
The exposure of epigenetics assists in developing effective mechanisms of predicting possible cell mutations. To be more elaborate, epigenetics allows us to understand cell mutations by creating conditions necessary for interpreting abnormal cell growth. The impact of chemical reactions on the changing of cells is the main reason of cell mutations. As epigenetics is the study of the modification in DNA sequence brought about by chemical reactions, then the study of those chemical reactions can assist to discover how different chemical reactions have an impact on cell mutations.…
This is a deadly device that can spread radiation or a toxic bacteria over thousands of…
Although not entirely clear, the experiments suggested two mechanisms. First, the data support that light-induced membrane depolarization resulted from a photochemical reaction that produced reactive oxygen species adjacent to the cell. The second mechanism was a transient perforation of the membrane that quickly re-sealed after the light was discontinued.…
The amount of injury caused by a radioactive isotope depends on its physical half-life, and on how quickly it is absorbed and then excreted by an organism. Most studies of the harmful effects of radiation have been performed on single-celled organisms. Obviously, the situation is more complex in humans and other multicellular organisms, because a single cell damaged by radiation may indirectly affect other cells in the individual. The most sensitive regions of the human body appear to be those which have many actively dividing cells, such as the skin, gonads, intestine, and tissues that grow blood cells…