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The proliferation of radioactive materials in industry, in
diagnostic and therapeutic medicine, in scientific and medical
research, in the military, and as a source of energy has increased
the likelihood of accidental exposure to ionizing radiation.
Further, the number of individuals exposed in accidents, such as
Chernobyl, U. S. S. R.; Goiania, Brazil; and San Salvador, El
Salvador, underscores the potential for large-scale radiation
accidents. Because of these accidents, health care providers have
found themselves treating patients with acute radiation injuries
and subsequent complications. Often the radiation injuries are
combined with burns or other trauma and the infectious and immune
complications associated with such injuries. The treatment of
victims of these accidents has provided important information about
the medical management of radiation casualties. However,
development of techniques to improve the diagnosis and treatment of
radiation injuries, to collect follow up data on survivors, and to
determine the long-term effects of uncontrolled radiation exposure
must continue. The Armed Forces Radiobiology Research Institute,
Bethesda, Maryland, and its Medical Radiobiology Advisory Team
sponsored the First Consensus Development Conference on the
Treatment of Radiation Injuries in Washington, DC, on May 10-13,
1989. The proceedings of the conference are presented in this
volume, which we hope will serve as a reference for clinicians and
basic research scientists who require knowledge of the latest
developments in the diagnosis and treatment of radiation injuries.
This conference was designed specifically to address the areas of
hematopoietic injury, infectious complications, and combined
injury."
The proliferation of radioactive materials in industry, in
diagnostic and therapeutic medicine, in scientific and medical
research, in the military, and as a source of energy has increased
the likelihood of accidental exposure to ionizing radiation.
Further, the number of individuals exposed in accidents, such as
Chernobyl, U. S. S. R.; Goiania, Brazil; and San Salvador, El
Salvador, underscores the potential for large-scale radiation
accidents. Because of these accidents, health care providers have
found themselves treating patients with acute radiation injuries
and subsequent complications. Often the radiation injuries are
combined with burns or other trauma and the infectious and immune
complications associated with such injuries. The treatment of
victims of these accidents has provided important information about
the medical management of radiation casualties. However,
development of techniques to improve the diagnosis and treatment of
radiation injuries, to collect follow up data on survivors, and to
determine the long-term effects of uncontrolled radiation exposure
must continue. The Armed Forces Radiobiology Research Institute,
Bethesda, Maryland, and its Medical Radiobiology Advisory Team
sponsored the First Consensus Development Conference on the
Treatment of Radiation Injuries in Washington, DC, on May 10-13,
1989. The proceedings of the conference are presented in this
volume, which we hope will serve as a reference for clinicians and
basic research scientists who require knowledge of the latest
developments in the diagnosis and treatment of radiation injuries.
This conference was designed specifically to address the areas of
hematopoietic injury, infectious complications, and combined
injury."
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