in the starch columns, it seemed necessary to determine the circumstances
introduced variability in the paper system. Interchange of the isotopic
label again proved to be a serious objection to the method when an acid m@dium
was used. The shift to ammonia in a butanol solvent resolved problems of Jinterchange.
solubility of water in butanol. The removal of excess water (by separatidn) at the
lower temperature and the return of the solution to room temperature made
chromatography procedure very reproducible. The separation of all the
compounds was surprisingly clean.

determinations on the serum and urine of a patient in a period of a few we
led to a very extensive study of serial quantitative chromatograms on blocf
days and weeks after a treatment dose of
151I had been given. These studies will be
described in a later section of this report.

Cellular Changes in Human Thyroids Treatedwith 1317
During the late 1940's the responsible investigator became interest
bizarre mucleatforms found in thyroids of some patients who had previous
treated with
Since the responsible investigator is a surgeon,
a unique Sprortunity to procure samples of previously irradiated thyroids
ufder very
strict experimental conditions, indication for surgery usually being the refoval of
residual masses. With the timing of the procurement of the sample followi
P Supervision
doses of 131] and the analyses being carried out in the laboratory under
of the same person who designed the experimental protocol and procured the samples of
tissue, it has been possible not only to obtain, with precise timing, tissug
out special histological techniques but also to observe the synthesis of th
hormone by these irradiated glands. At the time of the move from Boston tofCleveland

a total of 29 tmman thyroid tissues had been collected.

Although much of

the work had

been done under the former contract in Boston, the preparation of the materjal and of
the publication was accomplished later. The most important observation in fhis study
of radiation effects was the large, bizarre nuclear forms that appeared in fhe human
thyroids long after the radiation fron 131I was gone.
Dobyns, B.M., Vickery, A.L., Maloof, F., and Chapman, E.M.:

Functional and[Histological

Effects of Therapeutic Doses of Radioactive Iodine on ths Thyroid of Man.
Endocrinol. & Metab. 13: 548-567, 1953.

gf. Clin.

Early Radiation Experiments to Study Changes in Cellular Structure and Function in

Animals

When the bizarre nuclear forms were first discovered in man, animal e
were designed to observe long and short term effects of radiation in thyroi
given various doses of 131,.° More than 200 young rats were injected with v.
doses of 1317 ranging from 1 pe to 300 uc. The uptakes were determined, an
subsequent functional nature of the thyroids studied. This study became
effort of Dr. Farahe Maloof who was a co-worker and now the head of the th
laboratory of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Graded impairment to
demonstrated in the animals. See Figure 5. The two mst interesting histo
in these thyroids following irradiation were a persistent increase in cell
thyroid epitheliun even in the slightly irradiated giands and the bizarre n
as had been seen in some of the human material.

The increase in cell height], which was

thought to reflect an endogenous stimulus from the animal's pituitary resulting

from

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