aacuc.,

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OE OO OO OULU OE OR

internal emitters and external radiation exposure

Corporate Source:

Brookhaven National Lab.,

Upton,

NY

UL

(USA)

Conference Title:

Radiopharmaceutical dosimetry symposium

Publication Date:

1985

Conference Location:

Report Number(s):

Oak Ridge,

p18

TN,

USA

SBULIUL UT LLCO

Conference Date:

5 Nov 1985

BNL-37335; CONF-851113-3

Order Number: DE86006245
Contract Number (DOE): AC02-76CH00016
Note: Portions of this document are illegible in microfiche products
Document Type: Report; Conference literature

Language: English

Journal Announcement: NTS8&603
Availability: NTIS, PC AOQ2/MF AOl1;
Subfile:

NTS

(NTIS);

INS

(US

1.

Atomindex

input);

ERA

(Energy Research

Abstracts).
TIC (Technical Information Center)
Country of Origin: United States
Country of Publication: United States
Abstract: In a study of the comparative effects of internal versus external
irradiationof the thyroid in young people, we determined that the dose
from internal irradiation of the thyroid with short-lived internal
emitters produced several times less thyroid cancer than did the same

dose of radiation given externally. We determined this finding for a

group of 85 Marshall Islands children, who were less than 10 years of
age at the time of exposure and who were accidentially exposed to
internal and external thyroid radiation at an average level of 1400

rad. The external risk coefficient ranged between 2.5 and 4.9 cancers

per million person-rad-years at risk, and thus, from our computations,
the internal risk coefficient for the Marshallese children was
estimated to range between 1.0 and 1.4 cancers per million
person-rad-years at risk. In contrast, for individual more than 10
years of age at the time of exposure, the dose from internal
irradiation of the thyroid with short-lived internal emitters produced
several times more thyroid cancer than did the same dose of radiation
given externally. The external risk coefficients for the older age
groups were reported in the literature to be in the range of 1.0 to 3.3
cancers per million person-rad-years-at risk. We computed internal risk
coefficients of 3.3 to 8.1 cancers per million person-rad-years at risk
for adolescent and adult groups. This higher sensitivity to cancer
induction in the exposed adolescents and adults, is different from that
seen in other exposed groups. 14 refs., 8 tabs.

Major Descriptors: *ADULTS -- NEOPLASMS; *CHILDREN -- NEOPLASMS; *EXTERNAL
IRRADIATION -- RISK ASSESSMENT; *INTERNAL IRRADIATION -- RISK
ASSESSMENT
Descriptors: COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS; HUMAN POPULATIONS; THYROID
Broader Terms: AGE GROUPS; BODY; DISEASES; ENDOCRINE GLANDS; GLANDS;
IRRADIATION; ORGANS; POPULATIONS

Subject Categories: 560151*
-- Radiation Effects on Animals -- Man
560161
-- Radionuclide Effects, Kinetics, & Toxicology -- Man
INIS Subject Categories: C1500*
-- Effects of External Radiation on Man
C2110
-- Radioisotope effects, kinetics & toxicology in man

10/5/5390
01727076

Author(s):

Title:

(Item 290 from file: 103)
AIX-16-080569; ERA-11-016225; EDB-86-050751
Oliveira,

A.R.

de

Systematic register of nuclear accidents

Original Title: Registro sistematico de acidentes nucleares
Corporate Source:

NUCLEBRAS,

Publication Date: 1985

p 66

Rio de

Report Number(s):
INIS-BR-394
Order Number: RE86700747
Document Type: iReport; Numerical data
Language: Portuguese
Journal Announcement: NTS8511

Janeiro

(Brazil)

Availability: NTIS (US Sales Only), PC AO4/MF AOQl.

9003631

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