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not everyone can take it - but it does protect your thyroid, but that is

all

one thing...............only to protect your thyroid though - look at who

should and who shouldn't have it

Knowing what KI cannot do is also important.

KI cannot prevent radioactive iodine from entering the body. KI can

protect only the thyroid from radioactive iodine, not other parts of the

body. The thyroid gland cannot tell the difference between stable and

radioactive iodine and will absorb both. KI works by blocking radioactive

iodine from entering the thyroid. When a person takes KI, the stable

iodine in the medicine gets absorbed by the thyroid. Because KI contains

so much stable iodine, the thyroid gland becomes “full” and cannot

absorb any more iodine­either stable or radioactive­for the next 24

hours.

Potassium Iodide (KI)

What is Potassium Iodide (KI)?

Potassium iodide (also called KI) is a salt of stable

(not radioactive) iodine. Stable iodine is an important chemical needed

by the body to make thyroid hormones. Most of the stable iodine in our

bodies comes from the food we eat. KI is stable iodine in a medicine

form. This fact sheet from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

(CDC) gives you some basic information about KI. It explains what you

should think about before you or a family member takes KI.

What does KI do? Following a radiological or nuclear

event, radioactive iodine may be released into the air and then be

breathed into the lungs. Radioactive iodine may also contaminate the

local food supply and get into the body through food or through drink.

When radioactive materials get into the body through breathing, eating,

or drinking, we say that

“internal

contamination” has occurred. In the case of internal contamination

with radioactive iodine, the thyroid gland quickly absorbs this chemical.

Radioactive iodine absorbed by the thyroid can then injure the gland.

Because non-radioactive KI acts to block radioactive iodine from being

taken into the thyroid gland, it can help protect this gland from injury.

What KI cannot doKnowing what KI cannot do is also

important. KI cannot prevent radioactive iodine from entering the body.

KI canprotect only the thyroid from radioactive iodine, not other parts

of the body. KI cannot reverse the health effects caused by radioactive

iodine once damage to the thyroid has occurred. KI cannotprotect the body

from radioactive elements other than radioactive iodine­if radioactive

iodine is not present, taking KI is not protective.

How does KI work? The thyroid gland cannot tell the

difference between stable and radioactive iodine and will absorb both. KI

works by blocking radioactive iodine from entering the thyroid. When a

person takes KI, the stable iodine in the medicine gets absorbed by the

thyroid. Because KI contains so much stable iodine, the thyroid gland

becomes “full” and cannot absorb any more iodine­either stable or

radioactive­for the next 24 hours.

Iodized table salt also contains iodine; iodized table salt contains

enough iodine to keep most people healthy under normal conditions.

However, table salt does not contain enough iodine to block radioactive

iodine from getting into your thyroid gland. You should not use table

salt as a substitute for KI.

How well does KI work?Knowing that KI may not give a

person 100% protection against radioactive iodine is important. How well

KI blocks radioactive iodine depends on

how much time passes between contamination with radioactive iodine

and the taking of KI (the sooner a person takes KI, the better), how fast KI is absorbed into the blood, and the total amount of radioactive iodine to which a person is exposed.

Who should take KI? The thyroid glands of a fetus and of

an infant are most at risk of injury from radioactive iodine. Young

children and people with low stores of iodine in their thyroid are also

at risk of thyroid injury.

Infants (including breast-fed infants): Infants need to be given

the recommended dosage of KI for babies

(see How much

KI should I take?). The amount of KI that gets into breast milk is

not enough to protect breast-fed infants from exposure to radioactive

iodine. The proper dose of KI given to a nursing infant will help protect

it from radioactive iodine that it breathes in or drinks in breast milk.

Children: The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

recommends that all children internally contaminated with (or likely to

be internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine take KI, unless they

have known allergies to iodine. Children from newborn to 18 years of age

are the most sensitive to the potentially harmful effects of radioactive

iodine.

Young Adults: The FDA recommends that young adults (between the

ages of 18 and 40 years) internally contaminated with (or likely to be

internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine take the recommended

dose of KI. Young adults are less sensitive to the effects of radioactive

iodine than are children.

Pregnant Women: Because all forms of iodine cross the placenta,

pregnant women should take KI to protect the growing fetus. However,

pregnant women should take only one dose of KI following internal

contamination with (or likely internal contamination with) radioactive

iodine.

Breastfeeding Women: Women who are breastfeeding should take only

one dose of KI if they have been internally contaminated with (or are

likely to be internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine. Because

radioactive iodine quickly gets into breast milk, CDC recommends that

women internally contaminated with (or are likely to be internally

contaminated with) radioactive iodine stop breastfeeding and feed their

child baby formula or other food if it is available. If breast milk is

the only food available for an infant, nursing should continue.

Adults: Adults older than 40 years should not take KI unless

public health or emergency management officials say that contamination

with a very large dose of radioactive iodine is expected. Adults older

than 40 years have the lowest chance of developing thyroid cancer or

thyroid injury after contamination with radioactive iodine. They also

have a greater chance of having allergic reactions to KI.

When should I take KI? After a radiologic or nuclear

event, local public health or emergency management officials will tell

the public if KI or other protective actions are needed. For example,

public health officials may advise you to remain in your home, school, or

place of work (this is known as “shelter-in-place”) or to evacuate. You

may also be told not to eat some foods and not to drink some beverages

until a safe supply can be brought in from outside the affected area.

Following the instructions given to you by these authorities can lower

the amount of radioactive iodine that enters your body and lower the risk

of serious injury to your thyroid gland.

How much KI should I take? The FDA has approved two

different forms of KI­tablets and liquid­that people can take by mouth

after a nuclear radiation emergency. Tablets come in two

strengths, 130 milligram (mg) and 65 mg. The tablets are scored so they

may be cut into smaller pieces for lower doses. Each milliliter (mL) of

the oral liquid solution contains 65 mg of KI.

According to the FDA, the following doses are appropriate to take after

internal contamination with (or likely internal contamination with)

radioactive iodine:

Adults should take 130 mg (one 130 mg tablet OR two 65 mg tablets OR

two mL of solution). Women who are breastfeeding should take the adult dose of 130 mg. Children between 3 and 18 years of age should take 65 mg (one 65 mg

tablet OR 1 mL of solution). Children who are adult size (greater than or

equal to 150 pounds) should take the full adult dose, regardless of their

age. Infants and children between 1 month and 3 years of age should take

32 mg (½ of a 65 mg tablet OR ½ mL of solution). This dose is for both

nursing and non-nursing infants and children. Newborns from birth to 1 month of age should be given 16 mg (¼ of a

65 mg tablet or ¼ mL of solution). This dose is for both nursing and

non-nursing newborn infants.

How often should I take KI? A single dose of KI protects

the thyroid gland for 24 hours. A one-time dose at the levels recommended

in this fact sheet is usually all that is needed to protect the thyroid

gland. In some cases, radioactive iodine might be in the environment for

more than 24 hours. If that happens, local emergency management or public

health officials may tell you to take one dose of KI every 24 hours for a

few days. You should do this only on the advice of emergency management

officials, public health officials, or your doctor. Avoid repeat dosing

with KI for pregnant and breastfeeding women and newborn infants. Those

individuals may need to be evacuated until levels of radioactive iodine

in the environment fall.

Taking a higher dose of KI, or taking KI more often than recommended,

does not offer more protection and can cause severe illness or death.

Medical conditions that may make it harmful to take KI

Taking KI may be harmful for some people because of the high

levels of iodine in this medicine. You should not take KI if

• you know you are allergic to iodine (If you are unsure about this,

consult your doctor. A seafood or shellfish allergy does not necessarily

mean that you are allergic to iodine.) or

• you have certain skin disorders (such as dermatitis herpetiformis or

urticaria vasculitis).

People with thyroid disease (for example, multinodular goiter, Graves’

disease, or autoimmune thyroiditis) may be treated with KI. This should

happen under careful supervision of a doctor, especially if dosing lasts

for more than a few days.

In all cases, talk to your doctor if you are not sure whether to take KI.

What are the possible risks and side effects of KI?

When public health or emergency management officials tell the

public to take KI following a radiologic or nuclear event, the benefits

of taking this drug outweigh the risks. This is true for all age groups.

Some general side effects caused by KI may include intestinal upset,

allergic reactions (possibly severe), rashes, and inflammation of the

salivary glands.

When taken as recommended, KI causes only rare adverse health effects

that specifically involve the thyroid gland. In general, you are more

likely to have an adverse health effect involving the thyroid gland if

you

take a higher than recommended dose of KI, take the drug for several days, or have pre-existing thyroid disease. Newborn infants (less than 1 month old) who receive more than one

dose of KI are at particular risk for developing a condition known as

hypothyroidism (thyroid hormone levels that are too low). If not treated,

hypothyroidism can cause brain damage. Infants who receive KI should have

their thyroid hormone levels checked and monitored by a doctor. Avoid

repeat dosing of KI to newborns.

Where can I get KI? KI is available without a

prescription. You should talk to your pharmacist to get KI and for

directions about how to take it correctly. Your pharmacist can sell you

KI brands that have been approved by the FDA.

Other Sources of Information

The FDA recommendations on KI can be reviewed on the Internet at

Frequently Asked Questions on Potassium

Iodide

(KI) . The Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention's Emergency Response Site is available at

CDC

Radiation

Emergencies.

Sheri Nakken, former R.N., MA, Hahnemannian

Homeopath

Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Washington State, USA

Vaccines -

http://vaccinationdangers.wordpress.com/ Homeopathy

http://homeopathycures.wordpress.com

Vaccine Dangers, Childhood Disease Classes & Homeopathy

Online/email courses - next classes start March 4

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

not everyone can take it - but it does protect your thyroid, but that is

all

one thing...............only to protect your thyroid though - look at who

should and who shouldn't have it

Knowing what KI cannot do is also important.

KI cannot prevent radioactive iodine from entering the body. KI can

protect only the thyroid from radioactive iodine, not other parts of the

body. The thyroid gland cannot tell the difference between stable and

radioactive iodine and will absorb both. KI works by blocking radioactive

iodine from entering the thyroid. When a person takes KI, the stable

iodine in the medicine gets absorbed by the thyroid. Because KI contains

so much stable iodine, the thyroid gland becomes “full” and cannot

absorb any more iodine­either stable or radioactive­for the next 24

hours.

Potassium Iodide (KI)

What is Potassium Iodide (KI)?

Potassium iodide (also called KI) is a salt of stable

(not radioactive) iodine. Stable iodine is an important chemical needed

by the body to make thyroid hormones. Most of the stable iodine in our

bodies comes from the food we eat. KI is stable iodine in a medicine

form. This fact sheet from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

(CDC) gives you some basic information about KI. It explains what you

should think about before you or a family member takes KI.

What does KI do? Following a radiological or nuclear

event, radioactive iodine may be released into the air and then be

breathed into the lungs. Radioactive iodine may also contaminate the

local food supply and get into the body through food or through drink.

When radioactive materials get into the body through breathing, eating,

or drinking, we say that

“internal

contamination” has occurred. In the case of internal contamination

with radioactive iodine, the thyroid gland quickly absorbs this chemical.

Radioactive iodine absorbed by the thyroid can then injure the gland.

Because non-radioactive KI acts to block radioactive iodine from being

taken into the thyroid gland, it can help protect this gland from injury.

What KI cannot doKnowing what KI cannot do is also

important. KI cannot prevent radioactive iodine from entering the body.

KI canprotect only the thyroid from radioactive iodine, not other parts

of the body. KI cannot reverse the health effects caused by radioactive

iodine once damage to the thyroid has occurred. KI cannotprotect the body

from radioactive elements other than radioactive iodine­if radioactive

iodine is not present, taking KI is not protective.

How does KI work? The thyroid gland cannot tell the

difference between stable and radioactive iodine and will absorb both. KI

works by blocking radioactive iodine from entering the thyroid. When a

person takes KI, the stable iodine in the medicine gets absorbed by the

thyroid. Because KI contains so much stable iodine, the thyroid gland

becomes “full” and cannot absorb any more iodine­either stable or

radioactive­for the next 24 hours.

Iodized table salt also contains iodine; iodized table salt contains

enough iodine to keep most people healthy under normal conditions.

However, table salt does not contain enough iodine to block radioactive

iodine from getting into your thyroid gland. You should not use table

salt as a substitute for KI.

How well does KI work?Knowing that KI may not give a

person 100% protection against radioactive iodine is important. How well

KI blocks radioactive iodine depends on

how much time passes between contamination with radioactive iodine

and the taking of KI (the sooner a person takes KI, the better), how fast KI is absorbed into the blood, and the total amount of radioactive iodine to which a person is exposed.

Who should take KI? The thyroid glands of a fetus and of

an infant are most at risk of injury from radioactive iodine. Young

children and people with low stores of iodine in their thyroid are also

at risk of thyroid injury.

Infants (including breast-fed infants): Infants need to be given

the recommended dosage of KI for babies

(see How much

KI should I take?). The amount of KI that gets into breast milk is

not enough to protect breast-fed infants from exposure to radioactive

iodine. The proper dose of KI given to a nursing infant will help protect

it from radioactive iodine that it breathes in or drinks in breast milk.

Children: The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

recommends that all children internally contaminated with (or likely to

be internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine take KI, unless they

have known allergies to iodine. Children from newborn to 18 years of age

are the most sensitive to the potentially harmful effects of radioactive

iodine.

Young Adults: The FDA recommends that young adults (between the

ages of 18 and 40 years) internally contaminated with (or likely to be

internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine take the recommended

dose of KI. Young adults are less sensitive to the effects of radioactive

iodine than are children.

Pregnant Women: Because all forms of iodine cross the placenta,

pregnant women should take KI to protect the growing fetus. However,

pregnant women should take only one dose of KI following internal

contamination with (or likely internal contamination with) radioactive

iodine.

Breastfeeding Women: Women who are breastfeeding should take only

one dose of KI if they have been internally contaminated with (or are

likely to be internally contaminated with) radioactive iodine. Because

radioactive iodine quickly gets into breast milk, CDC recommends that

women internally contaminated with (or are likely to be internally

contaminated with) radioactive iodine stop breastfeeding and feed their

child baby formula or other food if it is available. If breast milk is

the only food available for an infant, nursing should continue.

Adults: Adults older than 40 years should not take KI unless

public health or emergency management officials say that contamination

with a very large dose of radioactive iodine is expected. Adults older

than 40 years have the lowest chance of developing thyroid cancer or

thyroid injury after contamination with radioactive iodine. They also

have a greater chance of having allergic reactions to KI.

When should I take KI? After a radiologic or nuclear

event, local public health or emergency management officials will tell

the public if KI or other protective actions are needed. For example,

public health officials may advise you to remain in your home, school, or

place of work (this is known as “shelter-in-place”) or to evacuate. You

may also be told not to eat some foods and not to drink some beverages

until a safe supply can be brought in from outside the affected area.

Following the instructions given to you by these authorities can lower

the amount of radioactive iodine that enters your body and lower the risk

of serious injury to your thyroid gland.

How much KI should I take? The FDA has approved two

different forms of KI­tablets and liquid­that people can take by mouth

after a nuclear radiation emergency. Tablets come in two

strengths, 130 milligram (mg) and 65 mg. The tablets are scored so they

may be cut into smaller pieces for lower doses. Each milliliter (mL) of

the oral liquid solution contains 65 mg of KI.

According to the FDA, the following doses are appropriate to take after

internal contamination with (or likely internal contamination with)

radioactive iodine:

Adults should take 130 mg (one 130 mg tablet OR two 65 mg tablets OR

two mL of solution). Women who are breastfeeding should take the adult dose of 130 mg. Children between 3 and 18 years of age should take 65 mg (one 65 mg

tablet OR 1 mL of solution). Children who are adult size (greater than or

equal to 150 pounds) should take the full adult dose, regardless of their

age. Infants and children between 1 month and 3 years of age should take

32 mg (½ of a 65 mg tablet OR ½ mL of solution). This dose is for both

nursing and non-nursing infants and children. Newborns from birth to 1 month of age should be given 16 mg (¼ of a

65 mg tablet or ¼ mL of solution). This dose is for both nursing and

non-nursing newborn infants.

How often should I take KI? A single dose of KI protects

the thyroid gland for 24 hours. A one-time dose at the levels recommended

in this fact sheet is usually all that is needed to protect the thyroid

gland. In some cases, radioactive iodine might be in the environment for

more than 24 hours. If that happens, local emergency management or public

health officials may tell you to take one dose of KI every 24 hours for a

few days. You should do this only on the advice of emergency management

officials, public health officials, or your doctor. Avoid repeat dosing

with KI for pregnant and breastfeeding women and newborn infants. Those

individuals may need to be evacuated until levels of radioactive iodine

in the environment fall.

Taking a higher dose of KI, or taking KI more often than recommended,

does not offer more protection and can cause severe illness or death.

Medical conditions that may make it harmful to take KI

Taking KI may be harmful for some people because of the high

levels of iodine in this medicine. You should not take KI if

• you know you are allergic to iodine (If you are unsure about this,

consult your doctor. A seafood or shellfish allergy does not necessarily

mean that you are allergic to iodine.) or

• you have certain skin disorders (such as dermatitis herpetiformis or

urticaria vasculitis).

People with thyroid disease (for example, multinodular goiter, Graves’

disease, or autoimmune thyroiditis) may be treated with KI. This should

happen under careful supervision of a doctor, especially if dosing lasts

for more than a few days.

In all cases, talk to your doctor if you are not sure whether to take KI.

What are the possible risks and side effects of KI?

When public health or emergency management officials tell the

public to take KI following a radiologic or nuclear event, the benefits

of taking this drug outweigh the risks. This is true for all age groups.

Some general side effects caused by KI may include intestinal upset,

allergic reactions (possibly severe), rashes, and inflammation of the

salivary glands.

When taken as recommended, KI causes only rare adverse health effects

that specifically involve the thyroid gland. In general, you are more

likely to have an adverse health effect involving the thyroid gland if

you

take a higher than recommended dose of KI, take the drug for several days, or have pre-existing thyroid disease. Newborn infants (less than 1 month old) who receive more than one

dose of KI are at particular risk for developing a condition known as

hypothyroidism (thyroid hormone levels that are too low). If not treated,

hypothyroidism can cause brain damage. Infants who receive KI should have

their thyroid hormone levels checked and monitored by a doctor. Avoid

repeat dosing of KI to newborns.

Where can I get KI? KI is available without a

prescription. You should talk to your pharmacist to get KI and for

directions about how to take it correctly. Your pharmacist can sell you

KI brands that have been approved by the FDA.

Other Sources of Information

The FDA recommendations on KI can be reviewed on the Internet at

Frequently Asked Questions on Potassium

Iodide

(KI) . The Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention's Emergency Response Site is available at

CDC

Radiation

Emergencies.

Sheri Nakken, former R.N., MA, Hahnemannian

Homeopath

Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Washington State, USA

Vaccines -

http://vaccinationdangers.wordpress.com/ Homeopathy

http://homeopathycures.wordpress.com

Vaccine Dangers, Childhood Disease Classes & Homeopathy

Online/email courses - next classes start March 4

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