Not Enough Igors
A while ago, I issued the challenge that someone SHOW ME THE (long term)
STUDIES of the Radioactive Iodine research was supposed to have been done
fifty years ago.
It's been repeated so often by so many people that RAI is safe, that I maintain
that these studies should be available to read somewhere. Well, no one did
manage to dig them up, so I took it upon myself to live in the "cyber archives"
of the Department of Energy to review the recently declassified documents
detailing the pioneering efforts in medical uses for radioactive materials.
So
far, what I've managed to uncover makes me feel I've stumbled into a Junior High
School Science Class gone berserk or into the old Gary Larsen cartoon picturing
lab-coated men fist fighting, entitled: "A Case of Too Many Mad Scientists and
Not Enough Igors"! One of the preeminent pioneers of RAI research drank it in
front of his classes to demonstrate how completely harmless it was. Of course,
he and two other colleagues died of leukemia and one shot himself, possibly
after being diagnosed. One of the last living medical pioneers stated
categorically that there is NO safe dose of radiation.
There was a "study" of 15 patients given I-131 in the 1940s, some of whom had
Graves', others had thyroid cancer. After reading 181 documents related to that
experiment, all I can glean in terms of a report is that four of the subjects
showed no notable change and that "clinical follow- up (showed) treatment
insufficient." No details are available so far as to how the "experiment" was
conducted, how much RAI was administered, or what the clinical follow-up
consisted of.
From 1955-1957, "Hyperthermic Research" was conducted in a military installation
in the Arctic, presumably to see if it would raise body temperature(?) They used
65 microcuries on presumably healthy people, "several hundred times less than
the 10 millicuries used in the treatment of Graves'. The results, as far as I
can tell, were inconclusive. They stressed that this amount "would not be
expected to cause adverse health effects". Was there any long-term follow- up of
these individuals? Darned if I can find out.
The last study I read about so far was one conducted on "consenting", physically
healthy schizophrenic patients. The head researcher was quoted as saying: "One
thing about the schizophrenia [patients], they're pretty hyper; so is an active
[hyperthyroid patient]. So, they had this in common. Was the thyroid in some
hidden way involved to create this jitterness (sic)? [That] was the question we
tried to answer." Hmm, I see.
I'm hoping that I just haven't come upon the "real" long-term studies yet, or
that they're still classified for some unfathomable reason. If not, we may be in
more trouble than we'd like think about in this country. In 1993, a pilot study
was drawn up to try to follow-up on "thyroid damage done in the 1940s from
radioactive fallout. (This is the same I-131 that we're talking about in the
medical "research". The plan is to first look for LIVING persons in the original
areas of the testing. ‘Interesting plan!. Well, in the meantime, if anyone out
there comes up with the REAL research, would you throw me a hint as to
where to find it? I'm still looking.
Redhen
Resources
Duck and Cover (up)
