INTERNAL DEPOSITION OF RADIONUCLIDES

5.3.

Internal Contamination in

Human Beings

Tue INTERNAL ConNTAMINATION study was be-

gun 15 days post-detonation with the collection

of pooled 24 hour urine samples from the
Marshallese and American groups. Maximum
activity in the urine occurs during the first few
days after internal contamination. By 1 week
an approximate equilibrium state is reached in
which the contaminants remaining in the body
are firmly fixed, chiefly in the skeletal tissues.
The activity in the urine then derives from
radioelements which have been replaced in the
natural process of biological turnover. Thus,
the study madeis essentially that of an equilibriumcondition.
The urine samples were sent to laboratories
in the United States for analysis, since the high
backgroundencountered in the field masked the
relatively low levels of activity in the aliquot
samples used. <A field laboratory is most desirable for a rapid survey, and was shown to be
feasible, if adequate facilities are provided for
the counting of the samples.
The first urine samples, mentioned above,

were collected for the Los Alamos Scientific

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Laboratory (LASL). Similar samples collected 44 days post detonation were also sent
there. On the 23rd, 24th and 47th days post
detonation, 24-hour urine collections from each
individual from Rongelap and Ailinginae were
sent to the New York Operations Office, Atomic
Energy Commission (NYOO-AEC) for analysis. In addition, samples from representative individuals in these groups were collected
21%, 3 and 6 months post detonation and sent
to NYOO-AEC.
The USNRDLcollected samples from each
member of the exposed groups at 43 and 46 days
post detonation. Samples from representatives of these groups were also collected at 214,
3 and 6 months by the USNRDL. In addition,
samples from a representative group of 6 Amerieans and 20 Marshallese were collected for 6
consecutive days beginning 383 days post
detonation.

5.31

69

Methods

As a complete radiochemical analysis of all
the urine samples was not feasible, samples were
analyzed for only Sr**, Ba’°, the rare earth
group andfissile material. These analyses are
the most useful for evaluating the concentration and identity of all the potentially hazard-

ous internally deposited radioactive isotopes.

Measurement was also made of the gross beta

activity of all the samples.

Tofacilitate the processing of the large number of urine samples sent from the field, a scanning method for beta measurement consisting
of a basic oxalate precipitation with a lanthanum carrier was employed on an aliquotof the
24-hour urine samples. This method rapidly
concentrates the radioactive elements into a
small volume and eliminates the normal K*
background. A carbonate precipitation of the
entire 24-hour sample increased the sensitivity
of measurement sufficiently for analysis of
samples collected later than 214 months post
detonation.
Thebeta activity was counted with a thin end
window Geiger-Muller counter. The counter
was calibrated with a U.O, standard, and an

appropriate correction for self-absorption was
made using a Sr® standard.
5.32

Findings and Interpretations

1. Beta Activity of the Urine. Internal dep-

osition of radioactive elements was evidenced

by the presence of significant amounts of beta
activity in the urine. This activity decreased
rapidly as a function of time, as it was derived
chiefly from short-lived radioisotopes. For
example, at 3 months post detonation, the mean
activity of the urine of adults from Rongelap
was 28 percent of the value measured 45 days
post detonation, and at 6 months, the activity
in the urine wasbarely detectable in most of the
individuals.
Comparison of the means of the urine samples for the adults from Rongelap and
Ailinginae and from Americans from Rongerik
indicated that at 45 days post detonation the

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