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NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH™GLINICAL. ‘STAFF

could not test for an organification defect.

It is probably a dose effect.
Dr. WELLINGTON Moore: We investigated chromosomechanges in Chinese ham-

ster thyroid cells after the administration
of different doses of '1I to animals 7 to 10

days of age. Thirty days and a year after
injection the thyroids were removed, trypsinized, and cells grown in tissue culture
for 3 days. The cells were arrested in metaphase, fixed, and stained for chomosomal

analysis. It was found that thyroid cells

were quite sensitive to irradiation. Doses
as low as 6 rads produced a tenfold in-

crease in the number of cells containing

aberrations at 30 days (3.3% versus 0.31%
in the control cells). Twenty-five percent of
the thyroid cells contained aberrations at
a dose of approximately 1,000 rads at 30

days. After 1 year the aberration rate had
decreased by three- to fourfold. This was
due in part to the increase in gland size
associated with the normal growth of the

animals. The persistence of the aberrant
thyroid cells (approximately one third of

the life span) suggests that some of these
damaged cells may persist for the remainder of the animal's life.
Dr. Rospsins: Thank you for the comment. That is another area I did not get
into because of time. It is of tnterest that
Drs. A. A. Al-Saadi and W. H. Bierwaltes
at the University of Michigan School of

Medicine have been studying chromosomal

aberrations in animals and find aberrations
resulting from iodine deficiency and other
forms of thyroid stimulation, so they may
not be limited to radiation effects, although

certainly that could be a contributing
cause.
Dr. Conarp: Attempts were made to do
chromosome studies on cultured thyroid
tissue from the operative specimens on the
Marshailese. Unfortunately, they were not

:

a

.
Annals of
Internal Medicine

a

ne Vago. SUMMARY

aged further, but the Marshallese who had

greater damage had no uptake, and so we

The presence of radioactive isotopes of

iodine in fallout from atomic explosionsis

well known. Inthe accidental exposure of
the inhabitants of one of the Marshall
Island after a fusion-type explosion in
1954, thyroid radiation from radioiodine,
particularly in the children, was sizable.

This resulted in the late development of
thyroid insufficiency or thyroid nodules or
both in 80% of those children exposed at
less than 10 years of age. At the present
time,

the

thyroid

effects

constitute

the

only important overt medical problem in
the exposed population. Detection of thyroid damage was hindered by its tnsidious
onset and by the unexpected occurrence of
elevated blood levels of iodoprotein in the
Marshallese population. The greater prevalence of thyroid abnormality in the children is probably due to two factors: a
larger radiation dose due to small thyroid
size and a greater likelihood of the growing organ to manifest changes resulting
from chromosomal alterations. The spectrum of radiation exposure of the thyroid
glands in any population is very wide,
ranging from stratospheric fallout from
atomic explosions and clinical testing with
radioiodine isotopes to high radiation rates

intentionally produced in therapy of thy-

roid diseases. The Marshal] Istand expert-

ence will help to define the range in which
significant thyroid damage mayoccur.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Weare deeply indebted to the many members of the medical survey teams over the past

12 years for their participation and for the material presented here. We are also grateful to
many other people for invaluable advice and
assistance, including Drs. C. L. Dunham and
H. D. Bruner of the Atomic Energy Commission; Drs, V. P. Bond, E. P. Cronkite, H. A.

Johnson, L. K. Dahl, J. E. Jesseph, and H. L.
Atkins of Brookhaven National Laboratory;
Drs. S. Warren, B. P. Colcock, and W. A.
Meisnner of Boston; Drs. G. H. Klinck, E. D.

Henley, C. J. Stah!, C. A. Broaddus, S. Lindsay,

and A. Hicking; and to other members of the
ae ne yea ore

successful.

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