[ RadSafe ] Polonium-210 poisoning
Otto G. Raabe
ograabe at ucdavis.edu
Sat Sep 10 13:38:56 CDT 2011
September 10, 2011
At London's Millenium Hotel on November 1, 2006, Alexander
Litvinenko, a Russian defector, was poisoned with tea containing a
large amount of polonium-210. He fell ill that very day and died
after a long hospitalization on November 23. He told investigators
that he had met with two former KGB agents early on the day he fell ill.
That event reminded me of an old black-and-white movie that I saw in
1950, and I recently rented it from Netflix. Well, the similarity of
that story was surprising, especially since that story was written so
early in the atomic age.
That 1950 movie was named "D.O.A", starring Edmond O'Brien.
While on vacation in San Francisco, an accountant named Frank Bigelow
is purposely poisoned at a bar with a "slow-acting" poison which the
doctors called a "luminous poison". In the movie, the physicians
detected the poison in the victim's blood using a blood sample mixed
in a test tube with a scintillation solution and observed the tube
glowing in the dark. This glowing tube is shown in the movie. The
doctors reported extensive blood cell damage and told Bigelow that
his condition was terminal. He had only a few days or weeks to live.
They said they could have pumped his stomach if he had come in soon
after he was poisoned, but he did not know that he was poisoned. The
doctors said that there was no antidote for this "luminous" poison.
Well the story is about how Bigelow searches for the attacker, and it
is quite interesting especially with all the old scenes in San Francisco.
Otto
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