less than 200 rads, are below the lowest dose:
which caused adverse biological effects seen i
experiments using beagles.

For example, Bair

colleagues at Battelle-Northwest have not obse
lung effects below about 2000 rads in dogs 10
12 years following a single inhalation exposur
?39pu0,.79

However, these animal data must be

interpreted with caution, as lung tumor incide
is essentially 100 percent at the lowest plutc
exposure levels.
Recently beagles have been exposed to low
initial alveolar depositions, but additional <4

Fig. 9.

?

on the dose-response function will not be avai

al

for many years.

The tn vivo counter with detectors in position for counting the

chest.

The estimated initial alveola

deposited plutonium in beagles which developed
tumors ranged from 0.2 to 3.3 uCi per total or
or ahout 3 to 45 nCi per gram of bloodless dog

counting time, the comparable value is about 3.5 n-

Park and his associates !® estimate that this a

ci.

of plutonium is 100 to 1500 times the estimate
Positive counts were obtained for 14 of 21 per-

sons measured.

These counts suggested chest burdens

ranging from 3 to about 10 nCi.

However, in no case

maximum occupational lung burden in man (i.e.,
0.016 uCi or about 0.03 nCi per gram of blood1l
lung).

As a conservative estimate based upon

did the estimated chest burden exceed the MDA at the

extrapolation of their data to the 15-year mea

95 percent confidence level.

life span of beagle dogs, these authors feel t

jects with positive

chest

Seven of the 14 sub-

counts had estimated chest

initial deposits of about 70 nCi in the lung (

burdens of 7 nCi or greater and may be considered

i nCi per gram), which cause premature death i:

(at the 68 percent level of confidence) to have

beagles, are about 30 times the concentration

statistically significant chest burdens of from 7

alent to the maximum permissible occupational

to 1O-nCi.

burden for man.

For reference, 10 nCi is about 2/3 of

the maximum permissible lung burden for occupational
workers (16 nCi).

If maintained indefinitely, this

This

conclusion,

of course,

based on the assumption that lung tumor develo
is related to plutonium concentration and not

burden will deliver about 15 rem per year to the

the total amount of plutonium in the lung.

lung, assuming uniform distribution of energy

example,

throughout the organ.

the

If one uses the 68 percent confidence level,

i:

Fo:

if tumor induction is somehow related

total number of cells

at

risk

(therefore,

t

number and size of plutonium particles), then i

certain qualitative statements can be made about

relative sizes of human and dog lungs may be ur

the chest measurements.

important and the 70 nCi which causes premature

For example, the estimates

of lung burdens of subject Nos. 1 and 2, who most

death from lung cancer in the dog may be about

likely received exposure to plutonium oxide, were

5 times

approximately 10 nCi.

sidered to be the maximum occupational lung bur

Subject Nos. 4 and 9, who

worked in the Recovery Group, each had a chest
burden ox about 8 nCi.

These relatively small

the total amount of plutonium (70/16)

«

for man. 28
The experimental data obtained from rodent

values are not surprising, in view of the known

are not as

translocation of plutonium from the lung to other

reports that the frequency of malignant neoplas

tissues as a function of time following inhalation.

of the lungs of rats exposed to plutonium by in

The cumulative radiation doses to the lungs

clear nor as encouraging.

Moskalev™

halation is 2 or 3 times higher than in the con

of some of our subjects have been estimated pre-

group at doses ranging from 41 to 234 rads.

viously by Langham? (Table V).

alev states that, assuming the biological effec

16

The values, all

Mo

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