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Journal Article

Citation

Schauer DA, Coursey BM, Dick CE, McLaughlin WL, Puhl JM, Desrosiers MF, Jacobson AD. Health Phys. 1993; 65(2): 131-140.

Affiliation

Division of Radiation Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Health Physics Society, Publisher Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8330958

Abstract

On 11 December 1991, a radiation overexposure occurred at an industrial radiation facility in Maryland. The radiation source was a 3-MV potential drop accelerator designed to produce high electron beam currents for materials-processing applications. This accelerator is capable of producing a 25 milliampere swept electron beam that is scanned over a width of 112.5 cm and which emerges from the accelerator vacuum system through a titanium double window assembly. During maintenance on the lower window pressure plate, an operator placed his hands, head, and feet in the beam. This was done with the filament voltage of the electron source turned "off," but with the full accelerating potential on the high voltage terminal. The operator's body, especially his extremities and head, were exposed to electron dark current. In an attempt to reconstruct the accident, radiochromic film and alanine measurements were made with the accelerator operated at two beam currents. Measured dose rates ranged from approximately 40 cGy s-1 inside the victim's shoe to 1,300 cGy s-1 at the hand position. Approximately 3 mo after the accident, it was necessary to amputate the four digits of the victim's right hand and most of the four digits of his left hand. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry, which measures the concentration of radiation-induced paramagnetic centers in calcified tissues, was used to estimate the dose to the victim's extremities. A mean dose estimate of 55.0 +/- 3.5 Gy (95% confidence level) averaged over the mass of the bone was obtained for the victim's left middle finger (middle phalanx).


Language: en

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