New medical countermeasures against nuclear threats

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Concerns about terrorist attacks, the prospect of a rogue nation using nuclear weapons and the Fukushima power plant accident in Japan are fostering efforts to develop a new family of drugs that everyone hopes will never be used, according to an article in the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society.

Ann M. Thayer, C&EN senior correspondent, explains that the federal government has launched programs to develop medical countermeasures against nuclear threats. Radiation releases can happen under various circumstances, including failure of safety systems at commercial nuclear power plants and terrorist attacks. The article describes programs run by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA), the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the National Institutes of Health that support several small companies as they try to develop drugs to treat acute radiation syndrome (ARS).

The article discusses the companies' approaches. Some seek to adapt existing drugs, including treatments for the side effects of radiation therapy for cancer. Thayer notes that because these drugs are already approved by the FDA, stockpiling them would be easier. Others are looking for new compounds that can treat the symptoms of ARS or remove radioactive particles from the body.

Comments

  1. kunosoura kunosoura United States says:

    Nuclear energy, the greatest discovery in human existance, has produced the greatest group of bureaucrats, con men, crooks , scams in world history. NRC, IAEA, UN, fear mongering politicians trying to get elected. In some 40 years of nuclear power in US, not a single death, not one significant radiaiton exposure and had public safety record far above any other power source, especially coal. In US nuclear power plants they produce 20% of the electrical poer and 70% of non-polluting power. The most radiation exposure anyone could possibly have received at Three Mile Island was one sixth of a single chest xray at your doctor*s office. Chem.Es use to be pretty smart folk, what happened to them ? Of course US no longer has Nuclear Engrs.

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