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-3preceding few days or weeks.

Iodine not absorbed by the thyroid will be

rapidly excreted, primarily in the urine.

Thus, in a short time after a

single intake, the gland will contain the highest concentration of the

iodine remaining in the body.

Because of its great avidity for radio-

iodine the thyroid will receive the largest radiation dose, particularly
if the form is

iodine-131:

The radiation dose delivered to other tissues will be, at most, a few

percent of that received by the thyroid gland. A concentration of 1 pe
of iodine-131 per gram of thyroid tissue will produce_a time-integrated
dose of about 113 rads ,° ranging from 90 to 130 rads,’
About 10 percent
of this dose will be received in the first 24 hours, probably over 25 percent
in the rirst 2 days.
When the thyroid is included in the beam from an external radiation
source, such as an X-ray tube, a considerable amowmt of surrounding tissue

will necessarily receive doses equal to or even greater than that received
by the gland itself.

Differences in growth rate and histology of the thyroid from birth
through early childhood have led some to believe that the infant thyroid

is more vulnerable than that of the adult to injury from ionizing radia-

tion. In addition to differences in size and proportion of proliferating
cells of the thyroid in infants, children, and adults, there may be significant alterations in absorption, metabolic turnover, and cell sensiti-

vity with advancing age.

Any of these factors might affect the amowt of

biological damage resulting from a given radiation dose. Neither the
relative importance nor the aggregate effect of these variables is known,
HUMAN EXPERIENCES
1.

Direct Effects of Iodine-131l

It has been pointed out that iodine-131 entering the body is promptly
and selectively concentrated in the thyroid gland, or is excreted, The
direct radiobiological effects are thus confined to the gland itself. The
principal effects, which have been observed only after high doses of
radioactive iodine, include a decrease in the metabolic activity of the
gland, and at still higher doses, an atrophy of epithelial cells, and the
appearance of numbers of atypical cells. These changes in function and
structure are seen only after doses of thousands of rads. Thyroid cancer
is an uncommon result, described with certainty to date only in animals,

CReport of the International Commission on Radiological Units and
Measurements (ICRU), 1959. National Bureau of Standards Handbook 78,
January 16, 1961, Washington, D. C.
‘silver S.: Radioactive Isotopes in Medicine and Blology.
Lea and Febiger, Philadelphia, 2nd ed., 1962, page 117.

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Medicine.

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