396 WHOLE BODY COUNTING RESULTS FROM1974 TO 1979 measurements were made in 1974 (Con75) and in 1977 (Coh77). In August 1977, the responsibility for providing body burden measurements was transferred from the Medical Department to the Safety and Environmental Protection Division at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The 1978 and 1979 body burden measurements of the Bikini population were conducted by the latter organization. In this report. the results of four whole body counting measurements on the Bikini population that were conducted in 1974 and 1977-79 are presented. Because the body burden measurements were performed by two different organizations, the current experimental design included a cross check mechanism to ensure that previous and current results are directly comparable. The approach to the problem was muitidirectional. First, key detection components were duplicated. Second. the systems were calibrated in the same manner (Coh63). Third, the operational procedures and counting geometries were basically similar. and an intercomparison study was conducted using Marshallese and Brookhaven personnel to ensure system comparability EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN Instrumentation The detector chosen for field use by both Brookhaven organizations is a 28-cmdiameter, 10-cm-thick, sodium iodide thallium activated scintillation crystal Nal(TI). It is optically coupled to seven, 7.6-cm-diameter low background magnetically shielded, photomultiplier tubes. In the current system the signal output from each photomultiplier tube is connected in parallel through a summing box with the combined output routed to a preamplifier-amplifier and then to a microprocessor-based computer/pulseheight no angeate: * a analyzer (PHA). The PHA datais stored on a magnetic diskette, and the results may be analyzed either in the field or at BNL using a matrix reduction, minimization of the sum of squares technique (TP76). Calibration on Analysis of Nal(Tl) spectra by the matrix reduction technique requires that the computer library contain a standard for each radionuclide that is expected in the field Measurement and that the fleld measurements and standards have the same geometry. To accomplish this. a review of the previous whole body counting data (Con75§; Coh77) indicated the need to calibrate for “K. Co and '"Cs. The current svstem was calibrated ustng an Anderson REMCAL phantom (Coh63). Each radionuclide was introduced into the phantom’s organs in an amount equivalent to the fraction in organ of reference of that in total body as defined by the ICRP in Publication 2 (ICRP59). To verify the activity in the phantom prior to use as a standard, an aliquot of the phantom solution was counted on a lithium drifted germanium detector which was calibrated with NBS standard sources. The phantom was then counted in a shadow whole body counter (WBC) (Paé5). The whole body counting system consists of a stationary crystal and stationary bed. The counter detects radioactive material located principally in the thorax, so positioning of the phantom and the in vivo counting subjects must be as similar as possible. To facilitate reproducible counting geometries, each subject and the standard phantom was positioned such that the central axis of the crystal intersected the central axis ‘of the body about 25 cm below the sternal notch. The distance between the surface of the bed and the bottom of the detector ts 32.4cm. The total system efficiencies for “K, “Co and '’Cs are listed in Table | as are typical minimum detection limits for these nuclides. Quality control The quality control (QC) program consisted of a cross comparison of the radionuclide quantities estimated to be in the phantom volume vs NBS calibration standards. Agreement between these two activity concentrations is within +5% for all radionucl- ides. Other quality control mechanisms employed were repetitive counting of secon- dary point source standards, multiple counts of Brookhaven personnel, repetative counting of the Marshallese (blind replicates) and an intercomparison study. (

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