Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Anti-radiation medication: Difference between revisions

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Spencerian (talk | contribs)
Repairing after edit-conflict.
Spencerian (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
==Notes==
==Notes==
*Anti-radiation medications do exist on the real-world Earth. One popular drug is [[w:potassium iodide|potassium iodide]], which blocks absorption of radiation by the thyroid gland, which aids in reducing the overall absorption of radioactivity into the human body.
*Anti-radiation medications do exist on the real-world Earth. One popular drug is [[w:potassium iodide|potassium iodide]], which blocks absorption of radiation by the thyroid gland, which aids in reducing the overall absorption of radioactivity into the human body.
{{drugs}}


[[Category:A to Z]]
[[Category:A to Z]]

Revision as of 19:21, 8 January 2007

A package of anti-radiation medication included with Helo's medkit (33)

Colonial medkits include syringes for injection of anti-radiation medication.

This medication is likely designed to allow certain tissues of the human body (typically, the thyroid gland) to block or resist absorption of radiation that proceeds nuclear bomb detonations.

Anti-radiation medications create nausea in many cases ("33", "The Passage")

Helo periodically injects himself in the neck (the location of his thyroid gland) to ward off the effects of Caprica's nuclear bombardment as he sought a way off of the planet and back to Galactica (33).

Samuel Anders and his team, the Caprica Buccaneers, escape the initial destruction, then later, as the organized Caprica Resistance, raids old Colonial Fleet supply depots for anti-radiation medication and other supplies (Resistance).

The Raptor pilots of the Fleet are routinely injected with anti-radiation meds as part of their series of escort flights through a highly-irradiated star cluster (The Passage)


Notes

  • Anti-radiation medications do exist on the real-world Earth. One popular drug is potassium iodide, which blocks absorption of radiation by the thyroid gland, which aids in reducing the overall absorption of radioactivity into the human body.
Contents