La radiación en la vida cotidiana

Autores/as

  • Patricia Mora Rodríguez Universidad de Costa Rica

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51481/amc.v41i2.504

Palabras clave:

radiación, dosis, radiación natural, uranio, BERT

Resumen

La comunidad médica nacional utiliza en su quehacer diario los beneficios de las radiaciones ionizantes para el diagnóstico y terapia de las enfermedades. Las dosis recibidas en el área médica son apenas una pequeña parte del total de radiación que recibimos durante el año. La presente revisión bibliográfica tiene varios objetivos, presentar los diferentes componentes que conforman las radiaciones naturales; introducir los productos de consumo humano que contienen fuentes radiactivas y que por Io tanto están exponiendo a nuestros cuerpos. Presentar argumentos para disminuir la tan común fobia a las radiaciones ionizantes y finalmente, introducir una magnitud dosimétrica de fácil entendimiento tanto para el médico, el técnico y el paciente.

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Publicado

1999-06-01

Cómo citar

Mora Rodríguez, P. (1999). La radiación en la vida cotidiana. Acta Médica Costarricense, 41(2), 16–23. https://doi.org/10.51481/amc.v41i2.504