495 ESTIMATION OF THE INTERNAL * RADIATION HAZARD The potential radiation effects that maybe pro- duced by specific quantities of internallv-deposited radioisotopes can be only roughly predicted from clinically observed effects of known amounts of internally-deposited radium. These effects do not appear unul a period of years (10 to 15) has elapsed. Thus, although it is possible to estimate the porential hazard in terms of the concentration of internal emitters, clinical observations made within a few years after contamination yield no data on the degree of damage that may ultimately be produced. In evaluating the long-term effects produced by an acute interna! exposure and exposureto residual contamination, Sr®® is clearly the critical element. Particular effort was therefore made to determine its levels in the urine of the Marshallese, and thus to estimate the body burdens. Of the gamma-emitting fission products, Cs'*” is of the greatest interest, even thoughit is of minor significance as an internal radiation hazard. Like Sr°°, Cs*** has a gaseous precursor with a half-life sufficiently long to avoid early condensation in the fireball. Cs'*” thus follows Sr®° into the stratosphere. Since the fission yields and the half-lives of the two radioelements are nearly equal, they 9 are present in the fallout in like quantities. While they have different ecological cycles because of their different chemical properties, Cs'*” nevertheless provides a useful tracer for studying the movement of Sr®® through the biosphere, since its gamma-emitting properties make it readily detectable. There is also some interest in the neutron-induced radioelement Zn*®, even thoughit, too, does not appear in levels hazardous to human beings. The interest centers chiefly around thefact thatit ; ; . a’ is definitely transmitted through marinelife, and thus provides a clear example of the transmission of a radioelement throughthe food chain to man. Other fission products and neutron-induced activities (Fe?55%, Co97-38-89) Mans) Celtt-Pritt, Zr°5-Nb*, and Ru'*-Rh?°*) also appear in small amounts in the soil and the food chain, and thus may appear ultimately in man, but the levels are 11859935 The body burden of fAssion products can be determined in three ways. The method of choice is the direct in vivo measurement bv whole-body spectrometry. [he limitations of this method are that few whole-bodv counters are in existence, they require enormouslybulky shielding and thus are not easily transported to various sites, and their absolute calibration is difficult. Further. this methodis restricted to analysis of gamma-emitting isotopes, since, to date, a whole-body beta counter has not been developed. Asecone nethod for calculating bodv burden. particularly for counting beta emitters such as Sr°°. is the estimation of the internal deposition from data obtained by radiochemical analysis of the urine. Finally, itis possible to make a completely indirect estimate of the human body burden of radioisotopes by what may becalled the environ- mental approach. In this method, the estimate of the body burden ts based on the concentrations of the fission products present in the environment, chiefly the soil and the important components of the diet. In order to make this estimate, data must be obtained on the transfer of the fission products between successive elements of the ecological chain leading from soil to bone. For example, al- though Sr and Ca are chemicaily similar and thus appeartogether in the various componentsofthe ecological chain, Ca is taken up preferentially by plants and animals so thatit is necessary to determune the discrimination factor for each step. When these factors are known, it is possible to estimate the concentration of a radionuclide in man from its concentration in any step of the ecological chain. All three of these approaches to the estimation of the body burdens in the Marshallese people will be considered in this report. EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES Whole-Body Counting The gamma-ray activity from the internallydeposited fission products and the neutron-induced activities in 227 of the Marshallese people were measured with a whole-body gamma scintillation spectrometer. The technique of in vie gamma-ray measurement of human beings was a creases, though manvfold, have remained far below maximum permissible levels. so low thatlittle effort was made to quantify these elements in the Marshallese until whole-body counting techniques madeit feasible. | we ow been reflected in ageimcrease in body burdens of some radionuclides..As will be shown, the in-

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