Now that it appears likely that
Yasser Arafat was killed back in November 2004 by polonium poisoning, I wanted
to do a brief posting on what happens when one ingests polonium (or Po-210) and
how it is created.
Polonium, an element with atomic number 84,
was discovered in 1898 by Pierre and Marie Curie and was named after Marie's
native land of Poland. It is produced during the decay of natural
uranium-238 and can be produced during the chemical processing of uranium ores
and is widely distributed throughout the earth's crust, albeit in very small
quantities. Po-210 can also be manufactured by irradiating bismuth-209,
creating bismuth 210 which then decays into Po-210. Only about 100 grams
of polonium are produced every year, making it an extremely rare element.
Polonium is used in devices that
eliminate static electricity in machinery including paper rollers and synthetic
fibre spinners. Since polonium also emits so many alpha particles, a
capsule containing about 1/2 gram will spontaneously reach a temperature of 500
degrees Celcius. This makes polonium an ideal lightweight heat source for
powering thermoelectric cells in satellites and was used on the Soviet moon
rovers to keep their internal components warm.
Po-210 has a very short half life of
only 138 days. When it decays, polonium emits alpha particles only.
It is a very volatile element with 50 percent vaporizing in air over a 45
hour period.
Polonium is highly radioactive and
very toxic. Damage to humans occurs from the absorption of alpha
particles into tissue. Only a minute dose of 10
to 30 micrograms is considered fatal. Polonium is only
dangerous when ingested since alpha particles do not travel more than a few
centimetres in air. The alpha particles emitted by polonium can easily be
stopped with a sheet of paper, clothing or human skin. It can however,
cause great damage when it is ingested through eating or drinking contaminated
food or water, breathing air that is contaminated with polonium or through an
open wound.
Once a human has ingested polonium,
it concentrates in red blood cells, the liver, kidneys, spleen, bone marrow,
gastrointestinal tract and gonads. It is eliminated in urine, bile, sweat,
breath and is also deposited in human hair. Unabsorbed polonium is also
eliminated in faeces. Symptoms of poisoning include nausea, diarrhea,
anorexia and lymphopenia (an abnormally low number of lymphocytes in the
blood). The higher the exposure level, the more rapid the onset of
symptoms and the more rapid the decline in the level of lymphocytes.
Eventually, cardiovascular and central nervous system syndromes develop
and hair loss occurs along with bone marrow failure. Death occurs within
weeks to months depending on the level of exposure and those who survive, often
take months to recovery fully.
The use of polonium as a murder
weapon was stimulated by the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko, a former officer of the Russian FSB, in 2006.
In his case, Mr. Litvinenko died three weeks after drinking tea that was
spiked with Po-210 with two former KGB colleagues at a hotel in London.
Here is a before and after photo of Mr. Litvinenko, showing the effects
of Po-210 poisoning:
In the case of Mr. Arafat, at this
point, it is not clear who or how the polonium was administered. Tests of
some of his belongings including a toothbrush and some garments show elevated
levels of polonium. Specimens taken from his decayed corpse after exhumation in 2012, including a tooth, fragments from the scalp and rib and pelvis bones showed that they "moderately support the proposition that death was the consequence of poisoning with polonium-2010.". In the case of Mr. Arafat, he began to show signs of
illness in Ramallah on October 12, 2004 that were consistent with polonium
poisoning and died one month later on November 11, 2004.
What a horrible way to go.
Fascinating and timely. I guess it's the bullet of the 'elite' in today's world. Thanks.
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