Biology Final Review Questions
Who was the first American radiation worker to die from radiation-induced cancer in October 1904
Clarence Madison Dally
Which of the following effects must be measured to determine the total amount of radiation exposure in a specific volume of dry air under standard conditions of pressure and temperature (760 mm Hg or 1 atmosphere at sea level and 22 degree C)
Quantity of ionization
In diagnostic radiology energy range (which includes mammography) from 23 to 150 kVp, which of the following tissues possesses the greatest ability to absorb radiant energy through the process of photoelectric absorption?
Bone
If a patient receiving x-ray therapy treatment receives a total dosage of 6000 rads, the dosage may be recorded as ______ if the SI system is used.
6000 cGy
One millirem equals ________ rem
1/1000
Fifteen sievert equals _______ rem
1500
As the intensity of x-ray exposure of the air volume increases, the number of electron-ion pairs produced:
also increases
Which of the following equals 400 rem
4000 mSv
Ten C/kg equals ______ roentgen
3.9 x 10^4
In the SI system an energy absorption of 1 joule (J) per kilogram of matter in the irradiated object equals which of the following
1 Gy
Thirty-five mSv equals ____ rem
3.5
Which of the following are types of ionizing radiation that produce virtually the same biologic effect for equal absorbed doses in body tissue?
X-rays, beta particles, and gamma rays
Which of the following statements is correct?
1 C/kg of dry air = 1
2.58 x 10^4 gray
45 rem equals ________ mSv
450
For x-rays and gamma ray photons with energies up to 3 million electron volts (MeV), which of the following quantities may be defined as the measure of the total electrical charge of one sign, either all pluses or all minuses, per unit mass that these two kinds of radiation generate in air only?
Exposure
Of the following equivalents, which equals 1 rad?
1. 100 erg/g
2. 1/100 J/kg
3. 0.01 Gy
1, 2, and 3
Alpha particles have a radiation weighting factor (WR) that is numerically equal to:
20
Which of the following units are NOT SI units?
1. roentgen
2. Coulomb per kilogram, gray and sievert
3. rad and rem
1 and 3 only
Which of the following units is a unit of energy that may be defined as the work done or energy expended when a force of 1 newton (N) acts on an object along a distance of 1 meter (m)?
joule
Which of the following statements is TRUE?
1 centisievert = 1 rem
Which of the following is the SI unit of electrical current?
ampere
Beta particles are actually:
high-speed electrons
Among physicians, cancer deaths attributed to x-ray exposure were reported as early as:
1910
The effective atomic number (Zeff) of soft tissue is:
7.4
Who discovered x-rays on Novemeber 8, 1895?
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
A nucleotide is formed from a nitrogen-containing base, a _____ -carbon sugar molecule, and a phosphate molecule.
five
The cell components that contain the centrioles are the:
centrosomes
Cytosine bonds only with
guanine
During which of the following subphases of mitosis do the centrioles migrate to opposite sides of the cell and begin to regulate the formation of the mitotic spindle?
Prophase
The number of mitochondria in cells varies from a few hundred to several thousand. The greatest number is found in cells exhibiting ____ acitivity.
the greatest
Antibodies are protein molecules produced by specialized cells in the bone marrow called:
B lymphocytes
The steps or rungs of the DNA ladder-like structure consists of complementary chemicals that are:
pairs of nitrogenous bases
In the human-body, mineral salts are necessary for:
1. proper cell function
2. creation of energy
3. conduction of impulses along nerves
1,2, and 3
Inorganic materials are compounds that _______ carbon
do not contain
The much smaller structures that make up nucleic acids are called:
nucleotides
Which of the following causes an increase in cellular activity that in turn causes biochemical reactions to occur more rapidly to meet the needs of the cell?
Enzymes
How many different amino acids are involved in protein synthesis?
22
In general, which of the following can human cells do?
1. Protect themselves
2. Regulate life processes
3. Reproduce
1, 2, and 3
Which of the following serves as a prototype for messenger RNA (mRNA)?
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
Compounds called purines include adenine and:
1. cytosine
2. guanine
3. thymine
2 only
Which of the following groups of cells is most radiosensitive?
Lymphocytes
If bone marrow cells have not been destroyed by exposure to ionizing radiation, they can
repopulate after a period of recovery
Which of the following groups of cells is least radiosensitive?
adult nerve cells
As LET increases, the ability of ionizing radiation to cause biologic effects
also generally increases until it reaches a maximal value
One micron (mm)=_____ m
10^-6
Which of the following humans is most radiosensitive?
the embryo-fetus during the first trimester of pregnancy
Neutrophils play an important role in
fighting infection
While passing through a human cell, an x-ray photon interacts with and inactivates the cell's master molecule. What is the consequence for the cell?
Death
The radiation dose required to produce mitotic death is
less than the dose needed to produce apoptosis in slowly dividing cells or nondividing cells.
Direct action may occur after exposure to any type of radiation, but it is much more likely to happen after exposure to:
high-LET radiation such as alpha particles
Which of the following is (are) considered low-LET radiation?
1. x-rays
2. Alpha particles
3. Gamma rays
1 and 3 only
Which of the following tissues contains cells that do not divide?
1. epithelial tissue
2. muscle tissue
3. nervous tissue in adult
2 and 3 only
Which of the following statements is true concerning patients who receive radiation exposure from a routine radiographic procedure such as CXR
patients are not expected to sustain appreciable damage to either the blood or the blood-forming organs as a consequence of the exam.
Based on current data, which of the following would be considered a safe radiation dose for the gonads of both males and females
0 Gy
A periodic blood count is not recommended as a method for monitoring occupational radiation exposure becasue
2 and 3 only
A biologic reaction is produced by 4 Gy of a test radiation. It takes 16 Gy of 250 kVp xrays to produce the same biologic reaction. What is the relative biologic effectiveness of the test radiation?
4
The normal white blood cell count for an adult ranges from _____ to ______/mm^3 of blood.
5,000-10,000
The term apoptosis is synonymous with
programmed cell death
Radiosensitivity of ova
varies considerably throughout the lifetime of the germ cell
Which of the following is a scavenger-type of white blood cell that fights bacteria?
Granulocytes
Which of the following illustrates the radiation sensitivity of a particular type of cell
survival cell
______ of the effects of x radiation and gamma in macromolecule of living system (in vivo) occur in a human male?
Most
OH+OH=
H2O2
Which of the following means the loss or change of a nitrogenous base in the DNA chain?
mutation
As a result of numerous reported patient injuries that have been
associated with the use of _______________, better management of the
use of such procedures is essential.
computed tomography
high-level fluoroscopy
routine chest
radiography
routine fluoroscopy
high-level fluroscopy
The correct order of development of the male germ cell from the stem
cell phase to the mature cell is:
spermatogonia,
spermatocyte, spermatid, sperm
spermatocyte,
spermatogonia, spermatid, sperm
spermatid,
spermatogonia, spermatocyte, sperm
sperm, spermatid,
spermatogonia, spermatocyte
spermatogonia, spermatocyte, spermatid, sperm
Atrophy refers to:
aging of the skin from radiation
exposure
shrinkage of organs and tissues after a high
radiation dose is received
necrosis of the hypodermis
from radiation exposure
wrinkling of the skin from
radiation exposure
shrinkage of organs and tissues after a high radiation dose is received
_____ syndrome is not a form of acute radiation syndrome.
Carcinogenic
Hematopoietic
Gastrointestinal
Cerebrovascular
Carcinogenic
Which of the following are classified as early (acute) deterministic
somatic effects of ionizing radiation?
Erythema,
cataract formation, cancer
Nausea, epilation, intestinal
disorders
Male and female sterility, embryologic
defects, cancer
Blood disorders, fever, genetic effects
nausea, epilation, intestinal disorders
Attempts have been made to measure chromosome aberrations after
diagnostic x-ray imaging procedures:
and these studies
have been very successful in measuring the number of chromosome
aberrations that occurred
but successful results have
not been achieved in these studies
but these studies
have only been moderately successful in measuring the number of
chromosome aberrations that occurred
but these studies
have only been minimally successful in measuring the number of
chromosome aberrations that occurred
but successful results have not been achieved in these studies
The hematopoietic form of acute radiation syndrome is also called the
_____ syndrome.
Auger
bone marrow
cerebrovascular
mutational
bone marrow
Genetic mutations have been produced in experimental female animals
when their ovaries were irradiated with doses as low as _____ Gy
(_____ rad).
0.10; 10
0.15; 15
0.20; 20
0.25; 25
0.25; 25
A single absorbed dose of 2 Gy (200 rad) can cause a
radiation-induced skin erythema within _____ hour(s) after
irradiation.
1
6
12
24 to 48
24 to 48
A decrease in the number of neutrophils can be caused by a radiation
dose of _____ Gy (_____ rad).
0.1; 10
0.2;
20
0.3; 30
0.5; 50
0.5;50
The prodromal stage of acute radiation syndrome is also referred to
as the:
initial stage
latent period
manifest illness period
recovery period
initial stage
For persons with hematopoietic syndrome, survival time shortens as
the radiation dose:
decreases
increases
remains the same
there is no survival time
for persons with the hematopoietic syndrome
increases
Grenz rays were once used to treat and cure:
acute
radiation syndrome
cancer
lupus disease
skin diseases, such as ringworm
skin disease, such as ringworms
The correct order of development for the female germ cell from the
stem cell phase to the mature cell is:
ovum, mature
follicle, corpus luteum, primordial follicle
corpus
luteum, primordial follicle, mature follicle, ovum
primordial follicle, ovum, corpus luteum, mature follicle
primordial follicle, mature follicle, corpus luteum, ovum
primordial follicle, mature follicle, corpus luteum, ovum
Research has shown that repeated radiation injuries have a _____
effect.
cumulative
quadratic
sigmoidal
threshold
cumulative
In 1898, after suffering severe burns attributed to radiation
exposure, which Boston dentist began investigating the hazards of
radiation exposure and became the first known advocate of radiation
protection?
Marie Curie
Clarence Madison
Dally
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
William Herbert Rollins
William Herbert Rollins
Studies of radiation therapy patients who received orthovoltage
radiation therapy treatments provide _____ evidence of skin damage
caused by radiation exposure.
no
minimal
a moderate amount of
significant
significant
Which of the following is the reason why the ovaries should be
shielded whenever possible during all imaging procedures?
Gonadal irradiation of the ovaries can result in somatic damage
that can be passed on to future generations.
Gonadal
irradiation of the ovaries can result in somatic damage but it cannot
be passed on to future generations.
Gonadal irradiation
of the ovaries can result in genetic mutations that can be passed on
to future generations.
There is no valid reason why the
ovaries should be shielded whenever possible during all imaging procedures.
Gonadal irradiation of the ovaries can result in genetic mutations that can be passed on to future generations.
Revised atomic bomb data for Hiroshima and Nagasaki suggest that
radiation-induced leukemias and solid tumors occurring in the
survivors may be attributed to exposure to which of the following?
X-rays
Gamma radiation
Neutrons
Gamma radiation
The term LD 50/30 signifies the whole-body dose of radiation that can
be lethal to ____% of the exposed population in _____ days.
50; 30
30; 50
50; 50
30; 30
50; 30
In the female the oogonia, the ovarian stem cells:
divide and reduce in number only during fetal development
multiply to millions of cells only during fetal development
are not present during fetal life
are
present only in very small numbers during fetal life
multiply to millions of cells only during fetal development
During the major response stages of acute radiation syndrome after
the initial stage, the period when symptoms that affect the
hematopoietic, gastrointestinal, and cerebrovascular systems become
visible is called:
latent period
manifest
illness
prodromal syndrome
manifest illness
Moist and dry desquamation can be caused by:
high
radiation doses
low radiation doses
radiation doses received during routine diagnostic imaging
procedures
radiation doses received during routine mammography
high radiation doses
Some local tissues suffer immediate consequences from high radiation
doses. Examples of such tissues include:
1. bone marrow
2.
male and female reproductive organs
3. skin
1 and
2 only
1 and 3 only
2 and 3 only
1, 2, and 3
1, 2, and 3
A term that is synonymous with epilation is:
alopecia
atrophy
desquamation
radiodermatitis
alopecia
Radiation-induced abnormalities are caused by unrepaired damage to:
all stem cells in the body
DNA within ova
or sperm
epithelial cells
somatic cells
DNA within ova or sperm
When a prediction is made that the number of excess cancers in a
given population will increase as the natural incidence of cancer
increases in that population with age, the risk is described by which
of the following terms?
Absolute
Excess
Quadratic
Relative
Relative
Laboratory experiments with mice prove that cataracts may be induced
with doses of ionizing radiation as low as _____ Gy (_____ rads).
0.10; 10
0.01; 1
0.50; 50
0.05; 5
0.10; 10
Genetic effects from exposure to ionizing radiation occur as a result
of radiation-induced damage to the DNA molecule in which of the
following?
1. Sperm of an adult male
2. Ova of an adult
female
3. Somatic cells of male and female adults
1 only
2 only
3 only
1
and 2 only
1 and 2 only
Radiation dose-response curves can be used to predict the risk of
_________ in human populations that have been exposed to low levels of
ionizing radiation.
cataract formation
genetic effects
malignancy
spontaneous abortions
malignancy
Radium decays with a half-life of:
8 days
50 year
500 years
1622 years
1622 years
Radiation-induced cataracts in humans follow a __________
dose-response relationship.
You Answered
nonlinear, nonthreshold
linear, nonthreshold
linear, threshold
nonlinear, threshold
nonlinear, threshold
The human body can incorporate radium into bone because it is
chemically similar to:
calcium
potassium
phosphorus
sodium
calcium
Mutations in genes and DNA that occur at random as natural phenomena
are called _____ mutations.
deterministic
sporadic
spontaneous
stochastic
spontaneous
Studies of Japanese atomic bomb survivors demonstrate that the
incidence of leukemia has _________ since the late 1940s and early
1950s and the incidence of solid tumors has continued to __________
since the late 1950s and early 1960s.
slowly declined,
escalate
increased rapidly, decrease
increased slowly, decrease
rapidly declined, decrease
slowly declined, escalate
For an accurate estimate of the number of radiation-induced leukemias
and other malignancies that may occur in some of the 135,000 evacuees
from the 1986 nuclear power station accident in Chernobyl, Ukraine,
the exposed population must:
not be permitted to receive
any additional medical radiation exposure for at least 20 years from
the date of the accident
not be permitted to intermingle
with the unexposed population
remain living in the same
geographic area for the remainder of their lives
have
long-term monitoring
have long-term monitioring
Genetic mutations at the molecular level are called _____ mutations.
chromatid
chromosome
molecular
point
point
The term “linear nonthreshold curve” implies that the biologic
response to ionizing radiation is _____ the dose.
directly proportional to
inversely proportional to
directly proportional to the square of
inversely proportional to the square of
directly proportional to
A radiation dose of 0.05 Gy to 0.15 Gy (5 to 15 rads) delivered to a
human embryo during the preimplantation stage of development results
in which of the following?
Congenital abnormalities
Delayed bone growth
Embryonic death
Microcephaly
Embryonic death
Of the following late somatic effects caused by exposure to ionizing
radiation, which effect is considered to be most important?
Cataract formation
Embryologic or birth defects
Cancer
None; all are considered to be of
equal importance
cancer
Existing data on radiation-induced genetic effects in humans:
prove conclusively that radiation causes major genetic effects
prove conclusively that radiation causes only minor
genetic effects
are still inconclusive
prove conclusively that radiation does not cause genetic effects
are still inclonclusive
Uranium miners in the Colorado plateau who developed lung cancer
years after exposure provide an example of which of the following?
You Answered
Early deterministic somatic effects
Late stochastic somatic effects
Early
genetic effects
Late genetic effects
late stochastic somatic effects
What do agents such as chemicals, elevated temperatures, ionizing
radiation, and viruses have in common?
They have nothing
in common.
They can increase the frequency of mutations
in only those members of the population who are already genetically
impaired.
They are all mutagens that may increase the
frequency of occurrence of mutations.
They always cause
spontaneous abortions during the first trimester of pregnancy.
They are all mutagens that may increase the frequency of occurrence of mutations.
What is the mean value of the radiation doubling equivalent dose for
humans, as determined from the offspring of the atomic bomb survivors
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
1.00 Sv (100 rem)
1.56 Sv (156 rem)
3.00 Sv (300 rem)
5.67 Sv (567 rem)
1.56 Sv (156 rem)
In which of the following human populations is the risk for causing a
radiation-induced cancer not directly measurable?
1. All
patients in diagnostic radiology subjected to a radiation dose below
0.1 sievert (less than 10 rem)
2. Chernobyl radiation accident
victims living in contaminated villages
3. Japanese atomic bomb
survivors
1 only
2 only
3 only
2 and 3 only
1 only
Which of the following groups of people exposed to ionizing radiation
provide proof that low-level radiation exposure produces late effects?
135,000 evacuees from the 1986 nuclear power plant
accident at Chernobyl, Ukraine
Japanese atomic bomb
survivors
Children of the Marshall Islanders who were
inadvertently subjected to fallout during the atomic bomb test in
1954
None of the above
None of the above
Normally, mutations in genetic material occur spontaneously, without
a known cause. A genetic disorder is present in approximately ____% of
all live births in the United States.
10
20
25
30
10
Today, as a result of programs stressing radiation safety education
and protective devices, radiation workers employed in medical imaging:
may only experience a moderate degree of adverse health
effects as a consequence of their work
may only
experience a small amount of adverse health effects as a consequence
of their work
need not experience any adverse health
effects as a consequence of their work
programs
stressing radiation safety education and the use of protective
devices have no impact on adverse health effects that radiation
workers sustain.
need not experience any adverse health effects as a consequence of their work
Studies of postpartum patients treated with ionizing radiation for
relief of mastitis indicate that in this group of individuals,
radiation exposure to healthy breast tissue:
can cause
breast cancer
cannot cause breast cancer
can cause breast enlargement
can cause breast shrinkage
can cause breast cancer
After the 1986 nuclear power station accident in Chernobyl, Ukraine,
an attempt was made to prevent thyroid cancer in children in Poland
and some other countries as a consequence of accidental overdose of
iodine-131, __________ was administered as a substitute for take-up of
iodine-131.
potassium bromide
sodium
chloride
sodium bicarbonate
potassium iodide
potassium iodide
When the speed of screen-film systems doubles, for example, when
changing from a 200-speed to a 400-speed system, patient radiation
exposure is _____ by approximately _____%.
increased; 25
increased; 50
reduced; 25
reduced; 50
reduced; 50
CR imaging has greater _______ flexibility than does conventional
screen-film radiography.
kilovoltage
milliamperage
time of exposure
x-ray
beam collimation
kilovoltage
In standard image intensification fluoroscopy, an x-ray beam
half-value-layer (HVL) of 3- to 4-mm aluminum is considered acceptable
when peak kilovoltage ranges from:
50 to 60
60 to 70
70 to 80
80 to 100
80 to 100
When settings are changed from one mA to a neighboring mA station,
the most that linearity can vary is _____%.
0
10
20
50
10
When performing a mobile fluoroscopic procedure, to reduce the
radiation exposure to the patient, the radiographer must use a minimal
source-skin distance of ____ cm (____ inches).
15; 6
30; 12
38; 15
45; 18
30;12
The control panel, where technical exposure factors are selected and
seen on indicators by the equipment operator, must be located:
at the foot end of the radiographic examining table
at the head end of the radiographic examining table
behind a suitable protective barrier that has a r
adiation-absorbent window that permits observation of the
patient during any procedure
behind any regular wall
that has a regular glass window that permits observation of the
patient during any procedure
behind a suitable protective barrier that has a radiation-absorbent window that permits observation of the patient during any procedure
To visualize smaller and lower-contrast objects during interventional
procedures, high-level-control fluoroscopy uses exposure rates that
are _______ those normally used in routine fluoroscopy.
higher than
lower than
the same as
none of these; smaller and lower-contrast objects cannot
be visualized by fluoroscopy during interventional procedures
higher than
During a fluoroscopic examination a resettable cumulative timing
device times the x-ray beam-on time and sounds an audible alarm or
temporarily interrupts the exposure after the fluoroscope has been
activated for what length of time?
1 minute
3 minutes
5 minutes
10 minutes
5 minutes
When using digital fluoroscopy systems, making use of the
last-image-hold feature can:
be an effective dose
reduction technique
eliminate the need to collimate the
primary beam
eliminate increased involuntary patient
motion
eliminate increased voluntary patient motion
be an effective dose reduction technique
Sharper size restriction of the radiographic beam is achieved when
the cone or cylinder is:
longer
shorter
made of aluminum
made of durable plastic
longer
What is the purpose of radiographic beam filtration?
To
decrease beam hardness, thereby reducing patient skin dose and the
dose to superficial tissues
To increase beam hardness,
thereby reducing patient skin dose and the dose to superficial
tissues
To eliminate short wavelength radiation to
reduce the radiation received by the patient’s skin and superficial
tissues
To increase beam hardness, thereby increasing
patient skin dose with only a slight increase to superficial tissues
To increase beam hardness, thereby reducing patient skin dose and the dose to superficial tissues
Depending on the area of the body being examined with a fluoroscopic
image intensification system, for adult patients a range of ______ kVp
is generally used.
30 to 60
60 to 75
75 to 110
110 to 140
75 to 110
When an exposed computed radiography imaging plate is ready to be
processed, an imaging reading unit is used to scan the photostimulable
phosphor imaging plate with a helium-neon laser beam. This results in
the emission of violet light that is changed into an electronic signal
by a device called a:
charge-coupled-device array
photodiode
photomultiplier tube
scintillator
photomultiplier tube
Of the following procedures, which involve extended fluoroscopic
time?
1. Biliary drainage
2. Stent and filter placement
3. Urinary or biliary stone removal
1 and 2 only
1 and 3 only
2 and 3 only
1,
2, and 3
1, 2, and 3
When compared with the traditional material in the front of a
cassette (aluminum or cardboard), the cassette front containing the
carbon fiber absorbs approximately _____ as much radiation, resulting
in a _____ dose for the patient because _____ radiographic techniques
are required to produce the recorded image.
four times;
higher; higher
three times; higher; higher
twice; higher; higher
half; lower; lower
half;lower;lower
Digital radiography images can be accessed:
at only one
workstation at a time, thereby decreasing the convenience for
physicians providing patient care
at no more than two
workstations at a time, thereby decreasing the convenience for
physicians providing patent care
at several workstations
at the same time, making image viewing very convenient for physicians
providing patient care
none of these; digital images
cannot be accessed at any workstations by physicians
at several workstations at the same time, making image viewing very convenient for physicians providing patient care
Luminance is determined by measuring the concentration of light:
at only one particular point of the field of view
over a particular field of view
at only one
particular point of the field of view and then squaring the number
over a particular field of view and then squaring the number
over a particular field of view
A radiographer uses a high-speed, rare-earth screen-film system with
optimal technical exposure factors to obtain posteroanterior and
lateral radiographs of a 2-year-old child’s chest. To maximize
reduction of radiation exposure to the patient following adequate
immobilization, the radiographer should collimate the x-ray beam so
that it is _______ shield the child’s reproductive organs.
only slightly larger than the margins of the image receptor and
no larger than the margins of the image receptor and
smaller than the margins of the image receptor and
smaller than the margins of the image receptor and not
smaller than the margins of the image receptor and
Current federal standards limit entrance skin exposure rates of
general-purpose intensified fluoroscopic units to a maximum of _____
R/min (_____ ´ 2.58 ´ 10–4 C/kg/min).
5; 5
10; 10
20; 20
25; 25
10; 10
Computed radiography, because of its higher exposure latitude, makes
grid use on the pediatric population:
absolutely
necessary for all radiographic examinations
less
necessary than was previously believed
necessary only
for extremity examinations
unnecessary for any examination
less necessary than was previously believed
Which of the following materials is commonly used in the tabletop of
a radiographic examination table to make the tabletop as radiolucent
as possible so that it will absorb only a minimal amount of radiation,
thereby reducing the patient’s radiation dose?
Carbon
fiber material
Formica
Granite
Slate
carbon fiber material
Federal government specifications recommend a minimum total
filtration of _____-mm aluminum equivalent for stationary (fixed)
fluoroscopic x-ray units operating above 70 kVp.
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2.5
Which of the following is not an x-ray beam limitation device?
Aperture diaphragm
Collimator
Filter
Extension cylinder
filter
When a fluoroscopic image is electronically amplified by an image
intensification system, which of the following benefits result?
1. Increased image brightness
2. Saving of time for the
radiologist
3. Patient dose reduction
1 and 2 only
1 and 3 only
2 and 3 only
1,
2, and 3
1, 2, and 3
Which of the following types of filters should be used to provide
uniform density when radiographing a foot in the dorsoplantar
projection?
Bilateral wedge filter
Trough
filter
Thoraeus filter
Wedge filter
wedge filter
The actual long-term health effects of a “dirty bomb” are likely to
be:
catastrophic
maximal
minimal
nonexistent
minimal
In ______, a neutron transforms itself into a combination of a proton
and an energetic electron.
alpha decay
beta
decay
gamma decay
x-ray absorptionb
beta
Each fluorine-18 nuclear transformation by positron decay yields two
highly penetrating ____-keV photons.
250
472
511
777
511
Radioactive material that is attached to or associated with dust
particles or in liquid form on various surfaces defines the term
radioactive:
contamination
dispersal device
fallout
syndrome
contamination
If enough explosives are used to spread radioactive material over a
broad area, then radioactivity is ______ higher than background
levels.
extremely hazardous and may be much
moderately hazardous and may be
slightly hazardous
and may be only slightly
diluted and may not be much
diluted and may not be much
Diagnostic techniques in nuclear medicine typically make use of
______ radioisotopes as radioactive tracers.
long-lived
short-lived
very weak
potentially lethal
short-lived
Strontium-89 is a pure __________ emitter.
alpha
beta
gamma
x-rayb
beta
During a radiation emergency, the dose limit for individuals engaging
in lifesaving activities is _____ mSv (_____ rem) per event.
50; 5
100; 10
250; 25
500; 50
250; 25
During a radiation emergency, at a dose rate of _____ Sv/hr (_____
rem/hr), emergency personnel should await specific instructions from
radiation experts on how to proceed.
0.1; 10
0.5; 50
1.0; 100
5.0; 500
0.1; 10
While a patient receiving iodine-131 (I-131) therapy is hospitalized,
a large, ____-inch-thick rolling lead shield can be positioned between
the patient and any attending personnel for protection.
up to 1
2
3
6
up to 1
The design of a ______ imaging suite involves significant radiation
safety concerns.
diagnostic x-ray
computed
radiography
computed tomography
positron
emission tomography/computed tomography
positron emission tomography/computed tomography
Iodine-125 (I-125) in the form of titanium-encapsulated cylindrical
seeds has been used quite extensively within the past decade to give a
tumoricidal radiation equivalent dose to:
malignant
brain tumors
malignant breast tumors
malignant lung tumors
prostate cancers that are
confined within the prostate gland
prostate cancers that are confined within the prostate gland
Strontium is a member of the same family of elements in the periodic
table as is:
calcium
carbon
sodium
potassium
calcium
Therapeutic radioisotopes are characterized by:
very
short half-lives
half-lives that are exactly the same
relatively long half-lives
half-lives that
remain constant for all eternity
relatively long half-lives
Tellurium-125 (Te-125) has _____ protons and _____ neutrons.
125; 125
75; 63
52; 73
45; 58
52; 73
What is the traditional unit of equivalent dose and effective dose
Rem
What is the quality factor for x-ray photons
1
What does the traditional radiation unit, the roentgen measure
Radiation exposure in the air only
Which of the following produces antibodies
lymphocytes
Water constitutes approximately ______ of the weight of the human body?
80-85%
Which action of ionizing radiation is MOST harmful to the human body
Indirect action
Which molecules in the human body are most commonly directly acted on by ionizing radiation to produce molecular damage through an indirect action
Water
Which of the following illustrates the radiation sensitivity of a particular type of cell
survival curve
Which of the following gonadel radiation doses may cause permanent sterility in a human male?
6.0 Gy
The absorbed dose is responsible for biological damage.
True or False
True