Japan radioactivity could enter food chain, children at risk

SINGAPORE, (Reuters) – Radioactive materials spewed  into the air by Japan’s earthquake-crippled nuclear plant may  contaminate food and water resources, with children and unborn  babies most at risk of possibly developing cancer.
Experts said any exposure to radioactive materials has the  potential to cause various kinds of cancers, with higher levels  of radiation seen as more dangerous.
But they said they needed more accurate measurements for the  level of radioactivity in Japan, and the region, to give a  proper risk assessment.
“The explosions could expose the population to longer-term  radiation, which can raise the risk of cancer. These are thyroid  cancer, bone cancer and leukemia. Children and foetuses are  especially vulnerable,” said Lam Ching-wan, chemical pathologist  at the University of Hong Kong.
“For some individuals even a small amount of radiation can  raise the risk of cancer. The higher the radiation, the higher  the risk of cancer,” said Lam, who is also a member on the  American Board of Toxicologists.
Radioactive material is carried by minute moisture droplets  in the air. It can then be directly inhaled into the lungs, get  washed down by rain into the sea and onto soil, and eventually  contaminate crops, marine life and drinking water.
Cow milk was also especially vulnerable, experts said, if  cows graze on grass exposed to radiation.
Lee Tin-lap, toxicologist and associate professor at the  Chinese University of Hong Kong’s School of Medical Sciences,  said waters around Japan must be measured for radioactivity.
“No one is measuring the levels of radiation in the sea,”  Lee told Reuters.
“Steam that is released into the air will eventually get  back into the water and sea life will be affected … once there  is rain, drinking water will also be contaminated.”
The World Health Organisation said today Japan was  taking the correct measures to protect its population from  radioactivity, including evacuations and stocking up on  potassium iodide, an antidote to radiation.

CHILDREN AT RISK
Radiation is dangerous because it can cause changes or  mutations in DNA, which may then go on to cause cancer. While  the human body can repair DNA changes or damage, a person is  only safe if the repair process happens faster than the time it  takes for the damaged or mutated DNA material to replicate.
Most experts agree that growing children and foetuses are  most at risk because their cells divide at a faster rate than  adults.
They also consume more cow milk than adults, putting them at  further risk, said a Japanese scientist who treated victims of  the atom bomb explosion in Hiroshima.
“Cows are like vacuum cleaners, picking up radioactive  iodine that lands over a wide area of pasture, and then those  particles very easily are concentrated and pass into the milk,”  said the expert, who declined to be identified.
“This was what happened in Chernobyl, and unfortunately,  information about the risk had not been supplied to parents.”