Similar but less severe hematologic alterations were observed in the

group receiving intermediate radiation doses on Ailingnae, whereas the lowexposure group on Utirik did not develop significant alterations of any blood
elements except for a slight transient depression of platelets noted only on
analysis of the entire population at four weeks post-exposure.
Despite thrombocytopenia and neutropenia in the heavily irradiated
group, bleeding tendencies and increased susceptibility to infection were not
observed. Even during the nadir of neutropenia, individuals were still able

to respond to an outbreak of upper respiratory infections by increasing leuko—

cyte outputs. Clinical sequelae of these hematologic effects were not observed except for one fatal case of acute myeloblastic leukemia in 1972 in a
young man who was one year old at the time of exposure. This may well represent a long-term hematologic effect of radiation.
D.

Dosimetric Evaluation

1.

Early Radiation

A number of caveats should be applied to interpretation of certain data
within this and previous reports. These apply principally to radiation dose
estimates and dose/effect correlations, especially regarding radiation induc—
tion of thyroid neoplasms as discussed in Section IX.C.1.
Since the initial incident created an emergency of unparalleled and
unanticipated proportions, data acquisition was necessarily secondary to
exigencies of evacuation, decontamination, and care of those affectea. Further, the task force was unprepared for gathering extensive dosimetry data or
analyzing radiochemical characteristics of the fallout in the actual areas of
deposition, since these were quite remote from the areas predicted.
Accurate dosimetry was hindered by a large wumber of variables:
1. Radiation monitoring teams and equipment were concentrated at a dis-—
tance in areas of predicted fallovt, and no monitoring personnel were in the
vicinity of the atolls actually affected.
2. The time of arrival of fallout at each point and its duration could
be estimated only by visual observations of the particulate debris, by the recorder of a single low-level gamma detector at the weather station on

Rongerik, and by calculations based om meteorological data and fallout prediction models.

3.

Actual gamma dose-rate measurements on each island were made by

ANPDR/39A survey meters but not until the times of evacuation, 50 to 78 hours
after the detonation.
4. Quantitative measuremetis of short-lived radioisotopes, especially
those of iodine (1331, 1344, 1357, were not obtainable.
5. The possibility of chesical fractionation within the cloud and conse-

quent production sf localized concentrations of specific radioisotopes was

also not measurable.
6. The complex radiation speccra of isotopes comprising mixed fission
product fallout produced gamma energy peaks in the regions of 0.1, 0.7, and
1.5 MeV, variably affecting midline depth doses.
7. The distribution of fallout debris on the ground, roc.s, trees, and
body surfaces proiuced an exposure geometry unlike any experienced previously

Select target paragraph3