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Pharmacist Donna Barsky measures potassium iodide for a prescription at the Texas Star Pharmacy on Monday, March 15, 2011 in Plano, Texas. (AP / Richard Matthews) Nuclear crisis in Japan has sparked a sudden surge in sales of iodine pills around the world. A baby is checked for radiation exposure level in Nihonmatsu in Fukushima prefecture on Tuesday, March 15, 2011. (AP / Kyodo News) A radiation detector marks 0.6 microsieverts, exceeding normal day data near Shibuya train station in Tokyo on Tuesday, March 15, 2011. (AP / Kyodo News) Officials wearing clothing to protect against radiation work in a centre to scan residents who have been within 20 kilometers of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant damaged by Friday's earthquake Tuesday, March 15, 2011, in Koriyama, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. (AP / Gregory Bull) Nuclear crisis in Japan has sparked a sudden surge in sales of iodine pills around the world.

Radiation fears spark rush for iodine pills

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CTV News Video

CTV News: Avis Favaro on the demand
An inexpensive supplement that protects the thyroid from radiation damage has shot through the roof over fears of nuclear particles making its way from Japan. But experts say most of the radiation will dissipate over the Pacific ocean.
Canada AM: Jay Ingram, Daily Planet
The host of 'Daily Planet' explains the different and best ways to protect against radiation. He also discusses reports that people in Japan are stockpiling Potassium Iodide and how the wind in the country will impact the spread of the radiation.
CTV News Channel: Dr. Howard Seiden, advisor
An advisor for corporate and occupational health and risk management says by taking non-radioactive iodine, your thyroid gland becomes saturated with it and the thyroid won't be able to store radioactive iodine.
CTV Calgary: Karen Owen on the iodine shortage
Stores that sell iodine supplements are selling out as people react to the possibility of radiation exposure from leaks at nuclear plants in Japan.
CTV Southwestern Ontario: Meghan Furman
When it comes to radiation, how much is too much? And when should people be concerned about their levels of exposure?

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Pharmacist Donna Barsky measures potassium iodide for a prescription at the Texas Star Pharmacy on Monday, March 15, 2011 in Plano, Texas. (AP / Richard Matthews) Nuclear crisis in Japan has sparked a sudden surge in sales of iodine pills around the world. A baby is checked for radiation exposure level in Nihonmatsu in Fukushima prefecture on Tuesday, March 15, 2011. (AP / Kyodo News) A radiation detector marks 0.6 microsieverts, exceeding normal day data near Shibuya train station in Tokyo on Tuesday, March 15, 2011. (AP / Kyodo News) Officials wearing clothing to protect against radiation work in a centre to scan residents who have been within 20 kilometers of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant damaged by Friday's earthquake Tuesday, March 15, 2011, in Koriyama, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. (AP / Gregory Bull) Nuclear crisis in Japan has sparked a sudden surge in sales of iodine pills around the world.

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Pharmacist Donna Barsky measures potassium iodide for a prescription at the Texas Star Pharmacy on Monday, March 15, 2011 in Plano, Texas. (AP / Richard Matthews)

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Date: Tue. Mar. 15 2011 8:22 PM ET

Panic over the radiation from the quake-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Japan is sparking a sudden surge in sales of iodine pills around the world -- even as health experts warn that the pills may be of little use.

Since word emerged that Japan has begun distributing potassium iodide tablets to residents near the Fukushima facility, other global regions have noted a spike in sales of the pills.

In Russia's Far East, not far from Japan, residents are buying up the pills in droves, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal -- even as the Russian government insists that radiation levels in Russia remain at normal levels.

There are reports that packets of potassium iodide pills are attracting bids of up to US$540 on eBay. And British Columbia's top medical officer, Dr. Perry Kendall, also noted a run on iodine tablets. He said the pills are unnecessary and asked drug stores not to sell them.

"It is recommended that pharmacies do not dispense or stockpile potassium iodide tablets," he said in a Monday news release.

"The consumption of iodide tablets is not a necessary precaution as there is no current risk of radiological I131 exposure. Even if radiation from Japan ever made it to British Columbia, our prediction, based on current information, is that it would not pose any significant health risk."

The buzz over the pills even compelled the World Health Organization to use Twitter to call for calm.

"Consult your #doctor before taking #iodine pills. Do not self-medicate!" the WHO wrote on its Twitter page Monday evening.

The WHO also used Twitter to caution against drinking iodine antiseptic, noting, "it will not protect you & might be harmful when taken orally."

Some drug stores and health food stores have reported shortages of the tiny white pills. But Canadian manufacturer, BGR Chemical Products, tells CTV News that even before the Japan crisis, there was already an iodine shortage.

The Quebec-based company's Chris Merrill tells says there has been a worldwide shortage of iodine for some time now. He notes the chemical is used in the manufacturing of LCD screens and TVs, and Chile, the world's largest iodine supplier, has had trouble meeting demand.

Despite the sudden interest in iodine pills sparked by the Japan crisis, health officials have been quick to note that potassium iodide is not an anti-radiation pill.

Potassium iodide can help prevent thyroid cancer after radiation exposure, by reducing the amount of radioactive iodine absorbed by the thyroid gland. But the pills cannot protect other organs from the effects of radiation exposure.

As well, the pills block only radioactive iodine, not other materials, such as radioactive cesium, which has also been detected outside the Fukushima facility.

What's more, iodine pills need to be taken very carefully. A single dose of potassium iodide, which also goes by the abbreviation KI, protects the thyroid gland for only 24 hours.

In some cases, it may be advisable for those exposed to radioactive iodine to take one dose of KI every 24 hours for a few days. But taking a higher dose of KI, or taking KI more often than recommended does not offer more protection. It can cause severe illness or death, warns the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

Some of the immediate side effects caused by KI may include stomach upset, allergic reactions (possibly severe), rashes, and inflammation of the salivary glands. Over the long term, too much potassium iodide can cause severe headaches, confusion, irregular heartbeat, and numbness, tingling, or weakness in the hands.

There are also those who point out that when it comes to radioactive iodine, the greatest danger is not from absorbing it from the air but from ingesting it in contaminated food and milk weeks after a radiation leak.

But Dr. David J. Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University, believes that the epidemic of thyroid cancer after the Chernobyl disaster probably could have been prevented if the government had immediately stopped people from drinking the milk from cows that had grazed one contaminated grass.

Comments are now closed for this story

Will
said
0 0

Instead of panicing, people need to pay attention to the facts. There is little to no danger of radioactive contamination here.


Lz in Edmonton
said
0 0

@ Evans That is the most fascinating thing I saw today. Thanks for that.


Robert
said
0 0

Evan and Dr.Manhattan: you're tremendously ignorant of the facts. There is a very real and serious radiation threat that is being under-reported. It's not the reactor cores so much but rather the spent fuel pools. These are also overheating and are far more "dirty". They contain many times the potential radiation than released during Chernobyl, and it would be devastating to the world. There is an excellent article released by the NY Times. Please read it.


boy
said
0 0

um how about evacuating the appropriate perimeter so that no one needs to take this poison.


miss living in shisui
said
0 0

i am always amazed at the amount of people who have expert opinions on what those of us right in the middle of this crisis in japan should and should not be doing...while sitting in the comfort of their homes thousands of miles away. the next time you find yourself right in the middle of a crisis situation like we have here in japan. i want you to take the advice of some jackass spewing their opinion. this is our lives that are in danger and any precautions we can take is our decision to make. not yours!!!!!


Evan in Athabasca
said
0 0

LOL!! you folks are so funny. Do you not know how much nuclear radiation was leaked into the atmosphere from testing nuclear warheads. Far more radiation was released to our atmosphere from 1945- present day via nuclear warheads. This is current disaster is just a prick on a needle compared to what has been done in the past and you were not aware. I will give coordinates to the US nuclear testing grounds, have a look in Google maps satellite view. Your eyes will be opened. 37.175801,-116.044579


Helga
said
0 0

I feel very bad for everyone in and around that area of Japan but my heart really feels heavy when I see the innocent eyes of kids and babies that haven't a clue what kind of "dicey" future they'll be facing with the possibility of deadly disease and chronic illness. No one deserves this but those kids for me really hammer that fact home.


marcincan
said
0 0

Potassium Iodine pills only protect the Thyroid from absorbing from I-131 and only the Thyroid... The type of fuel they are using would produce Cesium Cs-137 and Strontium Sr-90 as well and there is no magic pill for those isotopes. Stay inside and don't get hosed by media fueled snake oil salesmen


rose
said
0 0

I never take anything without asking my doctor first and even then I decide if I will take it . I also ask if there is one with no additives or chemicals.


Steve T
said
0 0

I've got some swamp land I'd like to unload too.


Dr.Manhattan
said
0 0

People are morons! There is no risk of harmful radiation, but instead take drugs that hurt themselves more! The true nature of the world's population has been revealed.


Intelligent Liberal
said
0 0

I have purchased an abundant supply of iodine for precautionary reasons. Those interested in your own personal safety can obtain supplies from various pharmacuetical outlets in your city or town.


Alert
said
0 0

The fuel used in the Japanese nuclear reactor where an explosion occurred today is more volatile and toxic than the fuel used in the other reactors there, a Japanese nuclear expert warned. At a press conference in Tokyo, Masashi Goto, who worked for Toshiba as a reactor researcher and designer, said the mixed oxide (MOX) fuel used in unit 3 of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant contains plutonium, which is much more toxic than the fuel used in the other reactors. MOX fuel is a mixture of uranium and plutonium reprocessed from spent uranium, and is sometimes involved in the disposal of weapons-grade plutonium. I think these fears and preventative actions are well justified for the young.


Bert
said
0 0

Radioactive particles would take 5 hours to cross the Pacific and would easily dissipate by then. A little bit of overraeacting.


MJ
said
0 0

I very much agree with Holly canadian government has always been to be too slow for everything and I bet you their own families are already taking precautions. They do not care for the tax payers.Why not give every houshold the precautional medicines from now


Jim
said
0 0

First KI pills only treat ONE TYPE OF RADIATION contamination, anything else and you are on your own. Secondly, those who are over 40 years old have a significantly reduced risk of contamination due to a number of biological factors. Thirdly, overduing it on the KI pills can make you very ill and potentially cause organ damage. Let's keep this in perspective people, the reason they are limiting the distribution is so that there is enough available for THOSE THAT REALLY NEED IT. Remember KI is not some magic anti-radiation pill. If you are next to a nuclear pile and have taken your pills chances are you're still going to get radiation sickness in one form or another. Grow up people and learn what's real...


Robert
said
0 0

While the information in this article is generally correct, it is also fairly telling that our government has failed to keep a large enough (if any) emergency supply to pass out to the public in the case of a radiological emergency.

I think that is key here and thus they should NOT be telling stores to keep these pills from the public. That is just wrong. However, I do agree that people should never take KI unless instructed to do so by a trained professional. The problem is would there be enough time if they were needed?


nuked canuck
said
0 0

For Dr. Perry Kendall to come out and say not to take potassium iodide and for stores not to sell the tablets is criminal. Like this doctor really knows the fallout of this the largest disaster in history. We don`t know the truth and it will be years before the full effects are felt. The worlds been nuked.


John R stender
said
0 0

if you reverse polarity in electromagnetic transformer you create an emp to pull in the ionized radioactive partiles to that point and transfer the particles into amass inversion to energy, kind of a ion vacuum cleaner


NS in NB
said
0 0

Oh yes, the hypochondriac, he'll hoard KI pills and take too many, then he'll cry radiation when he gets sick from the iodine.


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