CHAPTER 4 - THE RADIOIODINE PROBLEM--INHALATION
1. There is an insufficient basis for ruling out the threat
of thyroid damage attributable to inhaled radioiodine vapor released
in local fallout, even though it is the consensus of the ACCD/NAS
Fallout Subcommittee and many others that the radioiodine inhalation
threat is relatively minor compared to the ingestion threat,
2.

However, there is little question that the danger of thyroid

damage due to ingestion of radioiodine is significant and requires
protective measures.
The principal and probably only important ways

by which radioiodine could be ingested are through drinking contaminated
water or contaminated fresh milk. Thus, protection against ingestion
could be achieved by avoiding water from open reservoirs, cisterns,
and the like, where fallout has been deposited, and by keeping milk

cattle from grazing on contaminated pasture or not using their milk
if they do.
3.

A third means of protecting the thyroid against ingested

(and/or inhaled) radioiodine is through prophylaxis, i.e., using

pre-administered stable compounds of iodine such as potassium iodide

tablets to block the uptake by the thyroid of the radioactive iodine.
4.

There could be radioiodine hazards to the U.S. population

associated with a nuclear war even though the war did not directly
involve the U.S., i.e., the so-called world-wide fallout that would

result from an overseas nuclear exchange between, say, China and
Russia.
Also, there could be a radioiodine hazard due to an accidental
release of radioactivity from a nuclear reactor accident.

5.

It seems obvious that any national system designed to provide

radioiodine protection should take into account the various possible

threats, and it is equally obvious that the nature of the system may
change depending on which threats are to be covered. Therefore, a
final recommendation about the nature of the national protective system
should await the conclusion of current studies of the problem.

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