{"id":25589,"date":"2019-11-24T16:14:49","date_gmt":"2019-11-24T16:14:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sitepourvtc.com\/?page_id=25589"},"modified":"2023-06-16T11:08:22","modified_gmt":"2023-06-16T11:08:22","slug":"deterministic-effects","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/sitepourvtc.com\/nuclear-engineering\/radiation-protection\/radiobiology\/deterministic-effects\/","title":{"rendered":"Deterministic Effects – Ionizing Radiation"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Deterministic effects<\/strong> (or non-stochastic health effects) are health effects that are related directly to the absorbed radiation dose, and the severity of the effect increases as the dose increases. Deterministic effects<\/strong> have a threshold<\/strong> below which no detectable clinical effects do occur. The threshold may be very low (of the order of magnitude of 0.1 Gy or higher) and may vary from person to person. For doses between 0.25 Gy and 0.5 Gy, slight blood changes may be detected by medical evaluations, and for doses between 0.5 Gy and 1.5 Gy, blood changes will be noted. Symptoms of nausea, fatigue, and vomiting occur.<\/p>\n

Once the threshold has been exceeded, the severity of an effect increases with the dose. The reason for the presence of this threshold dose is that radiation damage (serious malfunction or death) of a critical population of cells <\/strong>(high doses tend to kill cells) in a given tissue needs to be sustained before an injury is expressed in a clinically relevant form. Therefore, deterministic effects<\/strong> are also termed tissue reactions<\/strong>. They are also called non-stochastic effects to contrast with chance-like stochastic effects (e.g., cancer induction).<\/p>\n

Deterministic effects<\/strong> are not necessarily more or less serious than stochastic effects. High doses can cause visually dramatic radiation burns and\/or rapid fatality through acute radiation syndrome<\/strong>. Acute doses below 250 mGy are unlikely to have any observable effects. Acute doses of about 3 to 5 Gy have a 50% chance of killing a person some weeks after the exposure if a person receives no medical treatment. Deterministic effects can ultimately lead to a temporary nuisance or also to a fatality. Examples of deterministic effects:<\/p>\n

Examples of deterministic effects are<\/strong>:<\/p>\n