December 29, 2005
Conference Paper

Dosimetry and Risk Assessment: Fundamental Concepts

Abstract

Radiation dosimetry is important for characterizing radiation exposures and for risk assessment. In a medical setting, dosimetry is important for evaluating the safety of administered radiopharmaceuticals and for planning the safe administration of therapeutic radionuclides. Environmental dosimetry helps establish the safety of radionuclide releases from electric power production and other human activities. Internal and external dosimetry help us understand the consequences of radiation exposure. The absorbed dose is the fundamental quantity in radiation dosimetry from which all other operational values in radiation protection are obtained. Equivalent dose to tissue and effective dose to the whole body are derivatives of absorbed dose and constructs of risk. Mathematical systems supported by computer software facilitate dose calculations and make it possible to estimate internal dose based on bioassay or other biokinetic data. Risk coefficients for radiation-induced cancer rely primarily on data from animal studies and long-term observations of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bomb survivors. Low-dose research shows that mechanisms of radiation interactions with tissue are dose-dependent, but the resulting biological effects are not necessarily linear with absorbed dose. Thus, the analysis of radiation effects and associated risks must account for the influences of microscopic energy distributions at the cellular level, dose-rate, cellular repair of sub-lethal radiation damage, and modifying factors such as bystander effects, adaptive response, and genomic instability.

Revised: February 29, 2012 | Published: December 29, 2005

Citation

Fisher D.R. 2005. Dosimetry and Risk Assessment: Fundamental Concepts. In Health Physics Society 2005 Summer School: Operational Health Physics: Planning and Implementation, July 5-8, 2005, Spokane, Washington, edited by DA Waite, et al, 52-63. Mclean, Virginia:Health Physics Society. PNNL-SA-47906.