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sma
09-07-2006, 09:23 AM
Home Preparation Procedure for Emergency Administration of Potassium Iodide Tablets to Infants and Small Children

INTRODUCTION

In the event of accidental release (or nuclear explosion, terrorist nuclear weapon) of radioactive iodine into the atmosphere, potassium iodide (KI) is recommended for use as an aid to other emergency measures, such as evacuation and food control measures. When used correctly, potassium iodide can prevent or reduce the amount of radioactive iodine taken up by the thyroid gland. The government stockpiles potassium iodide for emergency uses, such as in the event of an unexpected release of radioactive iodide.

Potassium iodide (KI) is stockpiled as tablets because tablets are easier to store; however, infants and small children cannot swallow tablets. In an emergency such as an unexpected release of radioactive iodine, the potassium iodide tablets may need to be given to infants and children by their parents or caregivers. Since potassium iodide dissolved in water may be too salty to drink, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is providing parents or caregivers with instructions on how to mix the potassium iodide tablets with a food or a drink to disguise the taste so infants and small children will take the medicine in an emergency. To see what worked best to disguise the taste of potassium iodide, FDA asked adults to taste the following six mixtures of potassium iodide and drinks.

Water
Low fat white milk
Low fat chocolate milk
Orange juice
Flat Soda (For example, cola)
Raspberry syrup
The mixture of potassium iodide with raspberry syrup disguises the taste of potassium iodide best. The mixtures of potassium iodide with low fat chocolate milk, orange juice, and flat soda (for example, cola) generally have an acceptable taste. Low fat white milk and water did not hide the salty taste of potassium iodide.

INGREDIENTS AND SUPPLIES NEEDED TO PREPARE POTASSIUM IODIDE (KI) TABLETS

Potassium iodide (KI) 130 mg tablet
Metal teaspoon
Small bowl
One of the drinks from the list above or infant formula.
PREPARATION FOR 130 MG POTASSIUM IODIDE TABLET

1. Grinding the potassium iodide tablet into powder

Put one 130mg potassium iodide tablet into a small bowl and grind it into a fine powder using the back of the metal teaspoon against the inside of the bowl. The powder should not have any large pieces.
2. Mixing potassium iodide powder into a drink

Add four teaspoonfuls of water to the potassium iodide powder in the small bowl. Use a spoon to mix them together until the potassium iodide powder is dissolved in the water.
3. Mix drink of choice with potassium iodide powder and water solution

Add four teaspoonfuls of drink to the potassium iodide powder and water mixture described in Step 2.
The amount of potassium iodide in the drink is 16.25 mg per teaspoon. The number of teaspoonfuls of the drink to give your child depends on your child's age. There is a chart at the end of these directions to tell you how much to give your child.

The potassium iodide in any of the six drinks listed above and infant formulas will keep for up to seven days in the refrigerator. FDA recommends that the potassium iodide drink mixtures be prepared weekly; unused portions should be discarded.

ADMINISTRATION

FDA recommends doses for potassium iodide based on age, predicted thyroid exposure to radioiodines, and -for women -- whether the woman is pregnant or nursing (see Table 1). Adults over 18 years of age and pregnant or lactating women should take the potassium iodide 130-mg tablet. Infants, children, and adolescents through 18 years of age should take potassium iodide in a drink prepared according to the procedure described above. Table 2 shows how many teaspoonfuls of potassium iodide mixture to give to an adolescent, child, or infant. The dose of potassium iodide should be taken once a day until a risk of significant exposure to radioiodines no longer exists.

If you are:
And your predicted Thyroid Exposure is
Then you should take: Number of 130 mg tablets

An adult over the age of 40
Equal to or greater than 500 centi-grays (cGy)
a 130 mg dose of potassium Iodide (KI)
1

An adult between the ages of 18 and 40
Equal to or greater than 10 cGy

A pregnant or lactating woman
Equal to or greater than 5cGy
Table 2. Recommended doses of KI for adolescents, children, and infants with predicted thyroid radioactivity exposures equal to or greater than 5 cGy1, using 130 mg tablet preparations.

If your child is:
Give your child this amount of Potassium Iodide (KI) *

An adolescent between 12 and 18 years old**
4 teaspoonfuls (NOT tablespoonfuls)
65 mg of potassium iodide (KI)

Between 4 and 12 years old
4 teaspoonfuls (NOT tablespoonfuls)
65 mg of potassium iodide (KI)

Over 1 month through 3 years
2 teaspoonfuls (NOT tablespoonfuls)
32.5 mg of potassium iodide (KI)

An infant from birth through 1 month
1 teaspoonful (NOT a tablespoonful)
16.25 mg of potassium iodide (KI)

* This is the amount to give your child for one dose. You should give your child one dose each day.
** Adolescents approaching adult size [equal to or greater than 154 pounds (70 kg)] should receive the full adult dose (130 mg tablet or 8 teaspoonfuls of KI mixture each day.

jim
09-17-2006, 05:42 AM
Or, one could just buy a large bottle of medical grade iodine solution and paint the child's (or adult's) hand with it.

jim

ryanmercer
10-25-2006, 03:00 PM
Or, one could just buy a large bottle of medical grade iodine solution and paint the child's (or adult's) hand with it.

jim

Yeah but potassium iodate is better... easier to give a kid a tablet than it is to say "now don't touch anything till your hands dry"

hillbilly_mom
10-25-2006, 06:44 PM
What is the difference in potassium iodide and potassium chloride?

eeyore
10-25-2006, 10:44 PM
THYROSHIELD $ 18.00 per bottle, includes shipping!

QUANTITY > THYROSHIELD (IN STOCK)

- 30ml Liquid Potassium Iodide w/ dropper
- 15 day protection for adult
- 30+ day protection for child
- One bottle per person recommended by FDA
- Black Raspberry flavored for easy child dosing
- No prescription required - OTC
- FDA Expiration date: August 2010
- View ThyroShield Consumer Package Insert
- In-Stock for Immediate Free Shipping!

ThyroShield™ is the only FDA approved Potassium Iodide (KI) liquid facilitating 65 mg. dosing. The FDA Guideline suggests: “For the sake of logistical simplicity in the dispensing and administration of KI to children, FDA recommends a 65-mg. dose as standard for all school-age children while allowing for the adult dose (130 mg., 2 X 65 mg. tablets) in adolescents approaching adult size


Found this at:
http://www.ki4u.com/products1.htm

ryanmercer
10-25-2006, 10:57 PM
What is the difference in potassium iodide and potassium chloride?

Potassium chloride is a fertilizer. Potassium iodine/iodate is a thyroid blocker that helps block the radioactive iodine that is released from nuclear attack or accident. Also potassium iodine is what makes your table salt iodized, and has many other applications.

hillbilly_mom
10-26-2006, 05:01 PM
Potassium chloride is a fertilizer?? :o My doc has me taking 20 meq every day for low potassium. I just wondered if that would work to give to my kids in case of an attack. I guess I better get the iodine. :-/

hillbilly_mom
10-26-2006, 05:03 PM
OK, another question. How long would we have to take the iodine for after an accident/attack? The ad above states it is for a 15 day supply for an adult. How long are you suppose to take it for after the "incident"?

ryanmercer
10-27-2006, 10:48 AM
OK, another question. How long would we have to take the iodine for after an accident/attack? The ad above states it is for a 15 day supply for an adult. How long are you suppose to take it for after the "incident"?

For as long as you are exposed to fallout. So however long it'll take you to get outside of the fallout radius... and remember radioative iodine can travel for hundreds of miles downwind.

hillbilly_mom
10-27-2006, 05:56 PM
Thank you

Rama_das
11-02-2006, 01:32 AM
Potassium chloride is a fertilizer?? *:o *My doc has me taking 20 meq every day for low potassium. *I just wondered if that would work to give to my kids in case of an attack. *I guess I better get the iodine. *:-/


potassium chloride is just that! potassium and chloride. sodium is sodium, they are all elements (i think that's the right word) they are all in the body, not usually as potassium iodine, or potassium chloride but as signal units that all flow and work together within the body to keep us alive.

iodine is the stuff that protects our thyroid, so potassium chloride will not help.

if you started taking potassium iodine (which you should do ONLY IN A NUCLEAR INCIDENT WHERE FALL OUT IS OR ABOUT TO AFFECT YOUR AREA) i would stop taking the potassium chloride.



these elements are found in food, soil, rocks of different kinds and poop ;)

potassium is critical in the body, it helps keep your heart beating! too much or too little will kill you.
don't worry about it, blood work will keep you safe, and follow the doctors orders is essential. but if you take the potassium iodine, i would not take the other! but you should talk to your doctor about it. (if you want to bring up concerns about a nuke attack? might end up locked up ;) safer to talk here lol. . .(saying that, i've read too much about nuke accidents/attacks, please oh please lock me up, i need a vaction)


but it is the iodine that is sucked up by the thyroid, so when radioactive stuff is around, our thyroids will suck it up, but you can fill your thyroid with good/pure/non rad iodine to prevent it sucking up the rad kind.

nuclear accidents with some radioactive junk acts the same way on our body/bones as the iodine does to our thyroid. but the element in this case is calcium. so if you keep iodine, keep calcium too.

if there was a melt down, or if cows were exposed to the two types of rad junk, barium is one, i can't recall the other. drinking it's milk would fill our body with the rad junk...

the good news is, that our body's prefer the real/pure calcium (and i believe the iodine too) over the rad junk so i will use it and push the rad junk out of our body!

sorry if this doesn't make sence, i haven't slept ::)

Rama_das
11-02-2006, 02:37 AM
OK, another question. *How long would we have to take the iodine for after an accident/attack? *The ad above states it is for a 15 day supply for an adult. *How long are you suppose to take it for after the "incident"?


FDA says not to take it for more then 10 days. but like ryan said, take it as long as you are exposed to fall out, and a couple days at least after!

this is the reason why you need to have a radio that is protected, so if you try to ride it out in a protected area, that you know or have an idea of how much radiation you are being exposed too.

one might consider getting a dosimeter that measure either the R/hour, or the total R that's been received by the device.

remember, a nuclear accident the radiation will be around for a very very long time.
with a bomb the radiation is broken up and attaches to dirt and stuff. . . but it's very small pieced of radioactive material, so the half life is shorter. but in a melt down or accident the material is intact and it's larger pieces of it. half life could be 1000s of years in some cases.

hillbilly_mom
11-02-2006, 05:56 PM
don't worry about it, blood work will keep you safe, and follow the doctors orders is essential. but if you take the potassium iodine, i would not take the other! but you should talk to your doctor about it. (if you want to bring up concerns about a nuke attack? might end up locked up ;) safer to talk here lol. . .(saying that, i've read too much about nuke accidents/attacks, please oh please lock me up, i need a vaction)




I might just talk to my doc about it, because we just had a fire at our nuclear power plant. It didn't release anything into the air, but I can tell her I was wondering if....
;) Plus she is a new doctor, with me being her first patient that has the medical problems I have. I might as well go all out and let her think I am nuts too. ;D And I could use a small vacation too. LOL Since DH is to be laid off next week it would be perfect timing. I could get away, he can stay and watch the kids.. ahh, no cooking, cleaning, just sitting around talking about the SHTF. They would love me in the looney bin. :o

Rama_das
11-03-2006, 01:29 AM
one book i read said that it's likely small and even some larger problems with nuclear plants would be played down. so people don't start protesting them. . . russia lied for weeks (and even still are keeping some lies up) about there plant.