It can if it doesn't work -- but that's not really the radiation, it's the cancer.
If you mean, can the radiation itself kill you (by causing radiation poisoning), then: no. The radiation dosage is much too small to cause death. Local tissues do suffer some cellular damage, but the damaged cells are usually replaced during the regular convalescent periods built into radiation therapies.
Radiation can have both suppressive and stimulatory effects on the immune system. In high doses, radiation can damage or kill immune cells, leading to immune suppression. However, at lower doses, radiation can actually stimulate the immune response by promoting the release of immune-stimulating molecules and activating immune cells. The overall impact on immune function depends on the dose, duration, and tissues/organs exposed to radiation.
The effects of nuclear radiation exposure depend on the dose received and can vary from immediate death to long-term health issues. Acute high doses can cause immediate organ failure and death within days to weeks, while lower doses may lead to long-term health problems such as cancer. It's important to seek medical treatment and follow safety measures to minimize exposure.
A hoplitis Rufohirta is a Massive radiation flow of negative energy, which causes either death or time travel, nobody, not even scientists know this, but me. Remember, Radiation can kill you, but the negative energy stops most of death rate.
Yes, an overdosage of Radiation can kill you.
enough of a drug, if you take a lethal dose, it will kill you.
No. This much dose will not kill you.
no it dose not
The amount of nuclear irradiation of the whole body which would be fatal to 50 percent of the exposed personnel in a given period of time.The dose of chemical agent that would kill 50 percent of exposed, unprotected, and untreated personnel.
Radiation can damage cells, particularly their DNA, leading to cell death or mutations. This damage can disrupt cellular functions and the body's ability to regenerate cells properly. Depending on the dose and type of radiation, exposure can cause acute radiation sickness, organ failure, or increase the risk of developing cancer.
Chemo radiation kill cancer cells.
The lethal radiation dose for humans is around 4 to 5 Gray (Gy) of ionizing radiation received all at once. This amount of radiation would cause severe damage to the cells and tissues in the body, ultimately leading to death within a few days or weeks.
no