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for three days increased the 6vey-all miean activity in thé 24 Abu urimes af the treated people
by a factor of 2.5 times compared with the pretreatment control excretion, Since the rate of
excretion of activity al this time was about 0.1 per cent, 24 hours, the observed tncrease in
excretion did not sizmificantly alter the total body burden. This study and previous animal work
suggest that EDTA, perhapsaidministered LV. and at carly intervals, might have been of cansiderably greater value in increasing the excretion of some of the internally deposited fission
products,

5.5

DISCUSSION

The fallout material probably entered the exposed people through both the tuhaiation snd
ingestion routes. The rekitively large particle size tidicates (hat the probability of inhalation
af cirborne confamination was small This is based on the observation that in general only
particles 0.1 to 3 oto diameter reach the alveoli on inhalation and (hat larger particles are
filtered oul by the nose and upper respiratory passage and aswallowed.@ In addition, the lungs
and air sacs of chickens autopsied in the period 24 to 100 days post-detonation showed low
levels of contamination, while the pastrointestinal tract and its contents were relatively active.
The high levels of activity found in the liver are also compatible with this hypothesis indicating
ingestion as the route of entry. Autopsy findings on five pigs indicate substantially the same
results.
in yeneral the mean gross beta activities in the urine of Rongelap and Ailinginae groups
were found to be roughly proportional to the calculated external dose and therefore to the cancentrations of airborne fission products. However, a comparison of mean beta activities of the
Ailinginae and American groups show the latter to have a somewhat lower amountof internal
contamination than the former though the groups received approximately the same calculated
external dose. The difference may well lie in the fact that the Ailinginae people continued to
eat contaminated food and drink contaminated water up tu the time of evacuation. The American
personnel probably ingested less contaminated food. Their water was distilled and stored in
closed containers which precluded the possibility of radioactive contamination. It is also possible that indoctrination of the American group as to the inhalation hazard and perhapstheir
more adequate shelter was responsible for the lower am. unt of internal contamination received. Radioanilysis of urine samples of the Japanese fishermen, who were exposed to the
same fallout, indicated that they had received approximately the same amount of internal contamination as did the Rongelap adult group. The lower urine activities found in the Marshallese
individuals under 15 years may indicate that with active bone growth occurring, the internally
deposited fission products were more firmly fixed and therefore less readily excreted. It does
not seem likely that the children were subjected to any less internal radioactive contamination
than were the adults.

8.6 CONCLUSION
The degree of internal radiation hazard was too low to have contributed significantly to the
acute radiation syndrome observed. Efforts to correlate individual body burdens with their

clinical or hematological findings (platelet and white blood cell levels) were unsuccessful. Due

to the ability of the skeletal system to concentrate fission products, any injury to the body from
these internal emitters would most likely be determined by the radiation effect on the bone.
The concentration and type of internal radioactive contaminants, however, minimize the probability of any significant long term effects from the internal radiation.

The possibility of synergistic effects from the combined exposure to external and near

tolerance doses of internal radiation is also very slight. The occurrence of such a synergism

has been demonstrated where animals were subjected to relatively high doses of internal emit-

ters (2 c,gm) in addition to high external doses. The only suggestion of such a combined effect ii thia situation was from the hematological response ot served in these exposed human
beings, which did not follow precisely the time course chara-teristically seen in lower mammals after short exposure to external radiation.

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