ss menerionr ¢ EVPECYR OF 10NIEING RABIZTITR Thes internal -nntami- netian reenited fram bath inbalation and ingre- tren of fatlen moterval. High levels of activity were found in water and on the cuternal surfaces of planes. The Pommbnenvation 8 the wntcce es)° ssrttionz ot xe of Sroits ledime is probably the mont Sezrdow: internal radieemitter st early time after exposure. The dese to the thyrond, although greater than tolerance, was lew compared tothe partially or teteily sb tating: Qin of T° uein ite icwacmem of and vequtables was mail. (f the individual hyperths ruedinm of carrinsmea. ty and relatively lang radioactive half-life was probebly the isntope of greatest potential hazard in the environment. Few of the fission products present in the environment were readily absorbed from the thon of se” wan calculated to be arar the maxi- ratiornectiden, Se”, borane of its high solebil- Nee cep eet to 1) rep fur Bongelap. lungs and the (7. I. tract. Radiochemical analysis of the urine samples from the Rongelap people indicates that Sr. Ba and the rare earth group together constituted 15 percent of the total beta activity of the urine at 45 days post detonation. Sr® was the predominant radionuclide at this time, contributing 42 percent of the total beta activity. Assays for fimile material in the pooled urine samples were negative The human body burden of indivigual radio- At ane day post detonation, the roncentre- mum permiwsible level for this nuclide. At later times following exposure, this longer-lived timion product presenis the greatest potential internal hazard. Oral administration of calcium EDTA be- ginning ¢ weeks post detonation to a represent- ative group of individuals from Rongelap ia- creased the rate of excretion of activity 2.5 times. However, the decrease of the body burden was slight, as the excretion rate was very low at this time. Analysis of the internal contamination indicates that the dose to the tisue of the body was near, but, with exception of the dose to the nuclides was estimated from radiochemical analysis of the human urine and of the tissues thyroid, did not exceed the maxinum permis- mean beady burdens of the radionuclides in the Ailinginae group were approximately one-half these of Rongelap. and the mean body burdens of the Americans about one-fourth of the Rongelap group. While the activity excreted per unit volume of urine was the same for adults and children from Rongelap, the total activity _ exereted in the urine in 24 hours by children wider To ye moof aye was symiticantly lower contribution of the effects of internal contami- and urine of animals from Rongelap. The than that ex oted by the adults. The total amenuat of radionctive material in the Ga To trvct at one day post detonation was estimated to be Sime in people from Rongelap. This activity was contributed chiefly by isotopes of short: radiologieal and biological half-life and hited solubility, and thus the levels of ac- tivity in the tissues of the body were relatively low. The concentration of radioisotopes at 6 months post detonmehon was barely detectable in the urine of mest of the exposed individuals, The estimated ose to the thyroid from 2? and other short lived tadine Isotopes was 100 sible dove levels. The activity tized in the body decreased rapidly as a function of time. The nation to the total radiation response observed appears to be small on the basis of the estimated hody burden of the mredioelements, In view of the short half-life of the most abundant fission products in the situation, the possibility that chronic irradiation effects will occur is small. 5.4 Internal Contamination of Animals Var Dsteanat Contamination of a number of animals collected on Rongelap was studied. The vetivaty in their urine was stuclied, and radio chennent analyses were made of various (issues. These data provided the basis for estimating the body burden of the madioisotopes in human berg. In addition. nematologieal and pathological studies were nade. and autoradiographs of selected tissues were prepared. A] number of the animals are also bemy studied for the TE A taneens amelie Ohcae

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