-2During the ensuing decade the people remained as healthy as the
population of unexposed Rongelap people used as a control group (about
200) with no further evidence of radiation effects, except an increase
in miscarriages and stillbirths in exposed women which is questionably
related to exposure.
II.

Late Effects

A.

Studies with negative findings

Animal studies have shown some nonspecific late effects such as
accelerated aging and premature deaths from degenerative diseases.
Such
effects have not been detected in human exposures.
Radiation-induced
shortening of life span appears to be related entirely in human beings to
certain malignancies.
In the Marshallese numerous studies of premature
aging effects,

similar to those carried out in the Japanese, have not re-

vealed evidence for such effects.
There has been no indication thus far
of any increase in degenerative diseases among the exposed Marshallese or
Japanese.
Similarly, though genetic defects in offspring of irradiated
animals have been demonstrated, such defects have not been positively
identified in studies of the first generation children of the Japanese.
In view of the negative nature of the Japanese findings no organized genetic
studies of the Marshallese children have been carried out, though no apparent
effects have been noted in the newborn, most of whom have been examined.

Dr. J. Neel (Univ. of Michigan) has examined, with negative results, a limited
number of blood samples of children of exposed Marshallese for variants of
serum proteins and erythrocyte enzymes that might indicate genetic mutations.
B.

Possible radiation late effects in the exposed Marshallese
i.

Thyroid
(a)

Growth retardation, development of nodules

Between 5-10 years after exposure growth retardation in
several of the children exposed at less than 5 years of age (particularly
notable in two boys exposed at 1 year of age) was the first evidence of
thyroid injury.
Thyroid nodularity first began to appear at 9 years after
exposure in the Rongelap people and shortly thereafter in the Ailingnae
group and more recently in the Utirik population.
The accompanying table
shows the present status of the thyroid findings, including the results of
surgery.
There have now been 45 thyroid abnormalities (34 with surgery)
among the 244 exposed Marshallese (39% of the Rongelap people and 7.0%
of the Utirik people compared with about 5% in unexposed Marshallese).
The
occurrence of three thyroid cancers in the exposed Utirik population
(compared with four in the Rongelap group) appears to implicate radiation
exposure in the etiology but the high incidence is puzzling since it is
greater than would be predicted based on Rongelap and Japanese data, and
there does not appear to be any increase in benign thyroid tumors in the
group compared to the much greater prevalance in the Rongelap group.

The institution of hormone treatment (Synthroid) in all exposed Rongelap
people, which began in 1965, has been essential in maintaining a euthyroid
state in the operated cases and has been important in correcting growth

rg sULGT43

Select target paragraph3