CESIUM-137 AND STRONTIUM-90 RETENTION FOLLOWING AN ACUTE INGESTION OF RONGELAP FOOD EDWARD P, HARDY, Jr.,* JOSEPH RIVERA,* and ROBERT A. CONARDT *Health and Safety Laboratory, U. 5. Atomic Energy Commission, New York, New York, and fBrookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York. ABSTRACT Marine and plant foods used by natives living on Rongelap in the Marshall Islands contain higher levels of long-lived fission-product radionuclides than do diets of people living in the United States due to residual contamination from fallout in 1954. During the 1963 medical survey of the Rongelap population, three food items indigenous to the Rongelap diet were brought back to the United States and consumed over a Seven-day period by a member of the medical team. The inges- tion of these foods introduced levels of *Srand "Cs which were 20 and 60 times higher, respectively, than in the normaldiet and was therefore considered in terms of an acute intake of two fission-product radio- nuclides that are important from a radiological standpoint. Urinary and fecal collections were analyzed separately, and whole-body ‘*’Cs measurements were made with a whole-body counter. The urine was the principal excretory route for the '*’Cs, whereas the feces was the main removal means for the “Sr. The retention of "Sr could be represented by a Series of exponentials, whereas the retention of cesium as determined by whole-body counting indicated that a single long-term component with a biological half-life of 74 days describes the removal process. Reasonably good agreement was obtained be- tween retention as determined by whole-body counting and by excretion measurements. It is estimated that about 25% of the “Sr from the Rongelap food was retained by the body at the end of 190 days. The 743

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