The Mercury

Scientist, humanitari­an, hero

How Marie Curie and her X-ray vehicles’ contributi­on to World War I battlefiel­d medicine possibly saved the lives of more than 1 million soldiers

- Jorgensen is the director of the Health Physics and Radiation Protection Graduate Programme and associate professor of radiation medicine at Georgetown University

ASK people to name the most famous historical woman of science and their answer will likely be: Madame Marie Curie. Push further and ask what she did, and they might say it was something related to radioactiv­ity. (She actually discovered the radioisoto­pes radium and polonium.) Some might also know she was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. (And the only woman to win two.)

But few will know she was also a major hero of World War I. In fact, a visitor to her Paris laboratory in October 1917 – 100 years ago this month – would not have found either her or her radium on the premises. Her radium was in hiding and she was at war.

For Curie, the war started in early 1914, as German troops headed towards her hometown of Paris. She knew her scientific research needed to be put on hold, so she gathered her stock of radium, put it in a leadlined container, transporte­d it by train to Bordeaux – 600km away from Paris – and left it in a safety deposit box at a local bank. She then returned to Paris, confident she would reclaim her radium after France had won the war.

With the subject of her life’s work hidden far away, she now needed something else to do. Rather than flee the turmoil, she decided to join in the fight. But just how could a middle-aged woman do that? She decided to redirect her scientific skills towards the war effort; not to make weapons, but to save lives.

X-rays, a type of electromag­netic radiation, had been discovered in 1895 by Curie’s fellow Nobel laureate, Wilhelm Roentgen. As I describe in my book Strange Glow: The Story of Radiation, almost immediatel­y after their discovery, physicians began using X-rays to image patients’ bones and find foreign objects – like bullets.

But at the start of the war, X-ray machines were still found only in city hospitals, far from the battlefiel­ds where wounded troops were being treated. Curie’s solution was to invent the first “radiologic­al car” – a vehicle containing an X-ray machine and photograph­ic darkroom equipment – which could be driven right up to the battlefiel­d where army surgeons could use X-rays to guide their surgeries.

One major obstacle was the need for electrical power to produce the X-rays. Curie solved that problem by incorporat­ing a dynamo – a type of electrical generator – into the car’s design. The petroleum-powered car engine could thus provide the required electricit­y.

Funding

Frustrated by delays in getting funding from the French military, Curie approached the Union of Women of France. This philanthro­pic organisati­on gave her the money needed to produce the first car, which ended up playing an important role in treating the wounded at the Battle of Marne in 1914 – a major Allied victory that kept the Germans from entering Paris.

More radiologic­al cars were needed, so Curie exploited her scientific clout to ask wealthy Parisian women to donate vehicles. Soon she had 20, which she outfitted with X-ray equipment. But the cars were useless without trained X-ray operators, so Curie started to train women volunteers. She recruited 20 women for the first training course, which she taught along with her daughter Irene, a future Nobel Prize winner herself.

The curriculum included theoretica­l instructio­n about the physics of electricit­y and X-rays as well as practical lessons in anatomy and photograph­ic processing. When that group had finished its training, it left for the front, and Curie then trained more women. In the end, 150 women received X-ray training from Curie. Not content to send out her trainees to the battlefron­t, Curie had her “little Curie” – as the radiologic­al cars were nicknamed – that she took to the front. This required her to learn to drive, change flat tyres and master some rudimentar­y auto mechanics, like cleaning carburetto­rs. And she also had to deal with car accidents. When her driver careened into a ditch and overturned the vehicle, they righted the car, fixed the damaged equipment as best they could and got back to work.

In addition to the mobile little Curies that travelled around the battlefron­t, Curie also oversaw the constructi­on of 200 radiologic­al rooms at various fixed field hospitals behind the battle lines.

Although few, if any, of the women X-ray workers were injured as a consequenc­e of combat, they were not without their casualties.

Many suffered burns from overexposu­re to X-rays.

Curie knew that such high exposures posed future health risks, such as cancer in later life. But there had been no time to perfect X-ray safety practices for the field, so many X-ray workers were overexpose­d.

She worried much about this, and later wrote a book about X-ray safety drawn from her war experience­s.

Curie survived the war but was concerned that her intense X-ray work would ultimately cause her demise. Years later, she did contract aplastic anaemia, a blood disorder sometimes produced by high radiation exposure.

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 ?? PICTURE: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPH­S DIVISION ?? Medics at a French World War I field hospital locating a bullet with an X-ray machine.
PICTURE: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPH­S DIVISION Medics at a French World War I field hospital locating a bullet with an X-ray machine.
 ?? PICTURE: ASSOCIATIO­N CURIE JOLIOT-CURIE ?? Marie Curie and her daughter Irène in the laboratory after World War I.
PICTURE: ASSOCIATIO­N CURIE JOLIOT-CURIE Marie Curie and her daughter Irène in the laboratory after World War I.
 ?? PICTURE: BIBLIOTHÈQ­UE NATIONALE DE FRANCE, DÉPARTEMEN­T ESTAMPES ET PHOTOGRAPH­IE ?? One of Marie Curie’s mobile units used by the French Army.
PICTURE: BIBLIOTHÈQ­UE NATIONALE DE FRANCE, DÉPARTEMEN­T ESTAMPES ET PHOTOGRAPH­IE One of Marie Curie’s mobile units used by the French Army.
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