April 2004 |
ToxFAQs™ |
for |
Americium |
(Americio) |
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This fact sheet answers the most frequently
asked health questions about americium. For more information,
you may call the ATSDR Information Center at 1-888-422-8737.
This fact sheet is one in a series of summaries about hazardous
substances and their health effects. This information is important
because this substance may harm you. The effects of exposure
to any hazardous substance depend on the dose, the duration,
how you are exposed, personal traits and habits, and whether
other chemicals are present.
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HIGHLIGHTS: Very low levels
of americium occur in air, water, soil, and food, as well
as in smoke detectors. Exposure to radioactive americium
may result in increased cancer risk. Americium has been
found in at least 8 of the 1,636 National Priorities List
(NPL) sites identified by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA). |
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What
is americium? |
Americium is a man-made radioactive chemical.
Americium has no naturally occurring or stable isotopes. Two
important isotopes of americium are americium 241 (241Am)
(read as americium two-forty-one) and 243Am. Both isotopes
have the same chemical behavior in the environment and the
same chemical effects on your body.
241Americium is used in ionization smoke
detectors. There is no broad commercial use for 243Am.
Nuclear reactors, nuclear explosions,
or the radioactive transformation of plutonium can produce
both 241Am and 243Am. These isotopes transform by giving off
alpha radiation and turning into radionuclides of other elements.
The half-life of a radioactive material is the time it takes
for half of the material to give off its radiation. The half-life
of 241Am is 432 years and that of 243Am is 7,370 years.
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What
happens to americium when it enters the environment? |
- Americium released to the air (from nuclear weapon tests)
will be associated with particles and will settle to the
soil
and water in rain or snow. Small particles in air can travel
far
from the point of release.
- Americium released into water will stick to particles
in the
water or the sediment at the bottom.
- Americium strongly sticks to soil particles and does not
travel very far into the ground.
- Plants may take up small amounts of americium from the
soil.
- Fish may take up americium, but little builds up in the
fleshy tissue. In shellfish, americium is attached to the
shell
and not to the parts you normally eat.
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How
might I be exposed to americium? |
- The general population may be exposed to very small
amounts of americium in air, water, soil, and food. They
may
also be exposed to very low levels of americium radiation
from smoke detectors and fallout from nuclear weapons
testing.
- People working at sites where transuranic waste from
nuclear weapons efforts or spent nuclear fuel from nuclear
power plants are stored may be exposed to higher levels
of
americium.
- People producing or handling americium in smoke
detectors or other devices may be exposed to higher levels
of radiation.
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How
can americium affect my health? |
The radiation from exposure to americium
is the primary
cause of adverse health effects from americium. Inside your
body, americium is concentrated in your bones, where it
remains for a long time. The radiation given off by americium
can change the genetic material of the bone cells and this
could result in the formation of bone cancers. The chance
of getting cancer is low at low doses, and increases as the
dose increases.
Laboratory animals exposed to very high
levels of americium had damage to the lungs, liver, and thyroid.
However, americium is accumulated in these organs for only
a relatively short time. It is unlikely that you would be
exposed to amounts of americium large enough to cause harmful
effects in these organs.
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How
likely is americium to cause cancer? |
Americium has not been found to cause
cancer in humans. However, studies in animals have demonstrated
that internal exposure to 241Am can cause cancer in bone and
liver, where americium is stored.
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How
can americium affect children? |
Children can be affected by americium
in the same ways as adults. However, exposure as children
could result in a longer period in which americium in the
bones could affect nearby cells and increase the chance of
causing cancer later in life. However, there are no actual
data showing that children are more sensitive than adults
to americium.
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How
can families reduce the risk of exposure to americium? |
Higher-than-normal levels of americium
may be in soil near a nuclear waste site, nuclear reactor,
or plant that manufactures ionization smoke detectors. Consequently,
prevent your children from eating dirt and make sure they
wash their hands frequently.
In the unlikely case that you are exposed
to high levels of radioactive americium because of accidental
release at a manufacturing facility, at a nuclear plant, or
because a nuclear weapon has been damaged or detonated, follow
the advice of public health officials who will publish appropriate
guidelines for reducing exposure.
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Is
there a medical test to show whether I've been exposed to americium? |
Two types of tests are available for
americium. One is to see if you have been exposed to a large
dose of radiation, and the other is to see if americium is
in your body. The first looks for changes in blood cell counts
or in your chromosomes that occur at 3 to 5 times the annual
occupational dose limit. It cannot tell if the radiation came
from americium. The second type of test involves examining
your blood, feces, saliva, urine, and even your entire body.
It is to see if americium is being excreted from or remains
inside your body. Either the doctors office collects
and sends the samples to a special lab for testing, or you
must go to the lab for testing.
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Has
the federal government made recommendations to protect human
health? |
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
has set limits for americium in workplace air of 3 x 10-12
microcurie per milliliter (µCi/mL) for 241Am and 243Am.
EPA set an average annual drinking water limit of 15 picocurie
of alpha-emitting radionuclides (such as americium) per liter
(pCi/L) so the public radiation dose will not exceed 4 millirem.
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References |
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry (ATSDR). 2004. Toxicological
Profile for americium. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Public Health Service.
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Where can I get
more information? |
ATSDR can tell you where to find occupational
and environmental health clinics. Their specialists can recognize,
evaluate, and treat illnesses resulting from exposure to hazardous
substances. You can also contact your community or state health
or environmental quality department if you have any more questions
or concerns. For more information, contact:
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Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Division of Toxicology
1600 Clifton Road NE, Mailstop F-32
Atlanta, GA 30333
Phone: 1-888-42-ATSDR (1-888-422-8737)
FAX: (770)-488-4178
Email: ATSDRIC@cdc.gov
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