858 BENINSON, RAMOS, AND TOUZET The stillbirths’ entries are, of course, the total discrimination factors between the mothers’ diets and the fetal bones. The agreement between the two sets of estimates is fairly good. In spite of all uncertainties involved, the values suggest that in young infants thereis little discrimination against strontium and that discrimination builds up reach- ing the “agreed” adult value of 0.25 during the second yearoflife. The importance of such small discrimination in young infants should not be overestimated. [If bone turnover is rapid, the skeleton burden of Sr would depend strongly on intakes at later ages, and the 0.25 value would be relevant in any long-term-risk evaluation. Turn- over rates could likely be estimated from *Sr/stable-strontium specific-activity measurements, but this would require more data than those obtained in the study presented in this paper. REFERENCES 1. D. Beninson, A. Migliori, and E. Ramos, Strontium-90 in the Diets and Bones of Children. Progress Report 1962-1963, in Fallout Program Quar- terly Summary Report, USAEC Report HASL-149, pp. 105-118, Health and Safety Laboratory, January 1965. 2. D. Beninson, E, Ramos, and R. Touzet, Strontium-90 in the Diets and Bones of Children. Progress Report 1964, in Fallout Program Quarterly Summary Report, USAEC Report HASL-149, pp. 119-129, Health and Safety Laboratory, January 1965. 3. Health and Safety Laboratory, Manual of Standard Procedures, USAEC Report NYO-4700(Rev.), August 1962. 4. United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, Report of the Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, United Nations Document A/5216, p. 303, New York, 1962. 5. Instituto Nacional de la Nutricién, Buenos Aires, Argentina, private communication. 6. Catedra de Pediatria, University of Buenos Aires, private communication. 7. Instituto Nacional de la Nutricién, Contenido en Calcio y Potasio de los Alimentos de la Republica Argentina, Buenos Aires, 1957. 8. D. Beninson, R. Touzet, and E. Ramos, Radioestroncio y Estroncio Estable en la Dieta y el Hueso Humano, Comisién Nacional de Energia Atémica Report, in press. 9. F. Bryant and J. Loutit, The Entry of Sr into Human Bone, Proc. Royal Soc., B159: 449 (1964). 10. C&tedra de Pediatrfa, University of Buenos Aires, private communication. 11. H. H. Mitchell, T. F. Hamilton, F.R. Steggerda, and H. W. Bean, The Chem- ical Composition of the Adult Human Body and Its Bearing on the Biochem- istry of Growth, J. Biol. Chem., 158: 625-637 (1945). 12. H.Sherman, Calcium and Phosphorus in Foods and Nutrition, Columbia University Press, New York, 1947.

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