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Industry | Personal protective equipment |
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Founded | 2011 |
Founders | Oren Milstein and Daniel Levitt |
Headquarters | |
Website | www |
StemRad is an Israeli-American start-up company that develops and manufacturespersonal protective equipment (PPE) againstionizing radiation. Its first product was the 360 Gamma, a device that protects the user's pelvicbone marrow fromgamma radiation.[1] StemRad has also developed the StemRad MD, a protective suit designed to provide whole-body radiation protection to physicians, and the AstroRad vest for radiation protection in space, which is currently being tested on theInternational Space Station and is one of the primary payloads onboardNASA'sArtemis 1 lunar mission.[2][3][4]
StemRad was founded in December 2011 by Oren Milstein and Daniel Levitt. They were inspired to create the company by theChernobyl disaster where many of the firemen and engineers, who were first on the scene, died from high doses ofgamma radiation in an illness known asAcute Radiation Syndrome (ARS), also known as radiation sickness. This idea was fueled by a sense of urgency due to the growing nuclear threat on the state ofIsrael. Following theFukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in March 2011, the two partnered withRoger Kornberg,Aaron Ciechanover andMichael Levitt.[5]
The 360 Gamma is a 14 kg (31 lb) belt designed to protect thepelvic area against gamma radiation. It is meant to be worn byfirst responders (fire fighters, paramedics, police and the military), that would be exposed to radiation in the event of a nuclear emergency.[6][7][8] It does not attempt to protect the whole body of the wearer, but, rather, selectively protects the bone marrow-rich pelvic region.[8] It is offered as a solution foracute radiation syndrome (ARS),[9] a major component of which isbone marrow failure.[10]
In November 2022, as a precaution to the risk of a nuclear emergency during the2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine brought about byRussian threats to use nuclear weapons and thecontinued shelling of theZaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, StemRad began donating 360 Gamma devices toUkrainian first responders.[11][12][13]
AstroRad is personal protective equipment for astronauts to be worn beyondlow Earth orbit which was co-developed by StemRad andLockheed Martin.[14] AstroRad protects bone marrow to prevent acute radiation sickness but is further expanded to also protect the lungs, stomach, colon, breast and ovaries – organs that are particularly sensitive to the development of cancer due to chronic exposure to radiation.[15] The AstroRad vest is strongly effective in shielding astronauts from thesolar energetic particles (SEP) released duringsolar storms. The functional shielding material is made ofhigh-density polyethylene (HDPE), which is a hydrogenous compound (with a high ratio of electrons to neutrons) optimized for shielding against charged particle radiation like SEP, according to theBethe-Bloch formula.[16][17]
As a test before its planned use in deep space, an AstroRad vest launched to theInternational Space Station (ISS) inlow Earth orbit on November 2, 2019 aboardCygnus NG-12 as part of the Comfort and Human Factors AstroRad Radiation Garment Evaluation (CHARGE) study. Four female astronauts wore the AstroRad vest in microgravity for variable durations during routine activities, providing feedback on ergonomics, range of motion, comfort and general user experience.[18] In addition, entrepreneur and formerIsraeli Air Force pilotEytan Stibbe wore the AstroRad vest duringAxiom Mission 1, a privately funded and operated crewed mission to the ISS, in April 2022.[19][20]
The AstroRad vest was also one of the primary payloads onboardNASA'sArtemis 1 mission, which launched an uncrewedOrion spacecraft in aMoon-orbiting trajectory on November 16, 2022, as part of the Matroshka AstroRad Radiation Experiment (MARE), an international collaboration between theIsraeli Space Agency, theGerman Aerospace Center, NASA, and Lockheed Martin.[21][22][23] Onboard the crew module were two femaleradiation dosimetry phantom torsos named Helga and Zohar, which measured radiation exposure throughout the body during the mission via both passive and activedosimeters distributed at sensitive and highstem cell-concentration tissues.[24] By comparing the dosimetry data from Helga and Zohar, the effectiveness of the AstoRad vest in shielding astronauts from radiation in deep space will be experimentally quantified.
The StemRad MD is a protective system designed forinterventional radiologists and other physicians who performmedical imaging usingionizing radiation, most notablyfluoroscopy.[25] This technology was designed to increase whole-body protection, particularly to the head, while providing physicians relatively free-range motion capabilities while operating. Forergonomic relief, the StemRad MD system uses a proprietary exoskeleton system.[25]
The protective ensemble consists of four main parts: a protective apron, a protective visor, a thyroid collar, and an exoskeletal system. The protective apron is of bismuth-antimony bilayer composition and offers 0.5mm lead-equivalent protection with a small overlap area of 1mm in the front.[25][26] The visor is made up of a transparent lead-acrylic material. It is positioned at an angle so that it blocks most of the radiation coming from underneath and allows the physician to wear unshielded prescription glasses while performing procedures.[25] The thyroid collar is integrated into the protective apron component and is flush with the bottom side of the protective visor.[25]
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