Page 535 hs Distribution of the Rare Eart ————— soil and plants (Lowman and Palumbo, unpublished data). These data indicate that very little of rare earth nue ee od ewe orincipal source of 4 Se als, also, 158 fist aed terrestrial anim nuclide iB The physical state of the t ytegen organism.— In ia eed governs its fate 10 the rption of cerium re appears to be some abso tion indicating that at least a por ae treestion. Chipman form. nucaide ts in the soluble um-144 was (or example, found that ceri liver tn small amounts by the bone and In addition, Rudakov (1958) reported foicroaners. the rare earth nuclides ingested under natural conditions is retained in the tissues of terrestrial animals. The inhalation of particulate matter is also a factor to be considered. This process could be important, especially during periods of ,heavy fallout from nuclear tests and accidental discharge of were absorbed by wign amounts of Ce'44-prl44 hour immersion in a radioactive materials from reactor stacks. initial concentration of these nuclides in their gastrointestinal tracts and low concentrations in other tissues. rsity of -Prl44 is incorporated in small $1955). Washington, soluble form. Uni- Seymour et al., 1957; Rinehart et al., 1955; As in other animals, the rare earth elements enter man during the ingestion of food and the inhalation of air and dust. Based on the data of J. G. Hamilton and co-workers, Morgan (1960) estimated In terrestrial animals there appears to be ry that less than 0.01 per cent of the rare earth ele- littie absorption of the rare earth nuclides rom the digestive tract. The results of Durbin et 1. (1956) showed that cerium-144, europlum-152 and puropium-154, terbium-160, and thulium-170 adminisfered orally to rats were not absorbed significantly. Bowsver. parenteral injection of several radiolanphar ides: complexed with an organic acid to increase their solubility. showed that absorption from the gite of injection was almost complete within four @ays. The primary sites of deposition initially @Were the liver and skeleton. After ten months, however, the site of greatest concentration was the bone ; other tissues contained only very small Bmounts of the rare earth nuclides (see also Kyker and Anderson, 1956). Similarly, in samples of rats gollected at Eniwetok Atol] shortly after a nuclear detonation, the rare earth activity was highest in he skeleton and liver (Thomas et al., 1958). Samles of rat tissues collected approximately two and one-half years after the last test series in 1958 Operation HARDTACK I) contained no detectable rare @arth radioactivity although there was some in the é Table 4. Nuciide BioPhysical logteal Lanthanum 140 BCoriumm ia. 4 ; Prometniim. 47 :é 1.68 Maximum Fe. BR i Rus ao 290 293 243 146 4 Eos . . a $ lat 7x10 GI-(s) Liver-(s) Lung- (1) GI-(i) GI~(s) 3=Bone-(s) 1500 1442 GI-(i GI-(s) Bune-(s) 6 the 1480 1125) tract water The last biological factor to be considered here is the selectivity and concentration of the rare earths by different species. Organisms in the lower trophic levels concentrate them to a greater degree than do organisms in the higher trophic levels. For example, Krumholz and Foster (1957) estimated that the concentration factor was 1,000 for phytoplankton, 500 for filamentous algae, and 100 for fish. Also, it has been shown by Spooner (1949), Rice (1956), and Rice and Willis (1959) in Maximum permissible concentration for 40-hour week GI-(s) Kidney-(s) Lung-(1) lar RE intesti 2x 1077 0.2 4 3 x 10 10-8 8 x 10/3 -4 3 x 10 3 6 x 1073 6 x 10 6 3 10/6 6 x 10° 0.6 210. 100 107 fraction reaching organ ; mens - : Soluble; = 10_ 6x 10-8 3.x 107° 0.09 107 1076 é x 10-8 3.5x1075 0.09 10-7 107 1078 2x 107° 1073 1 0.075 5 x 1077 0.3 2x 3 x 10 5 2x 2x 109 20 _ By inhalation 10 0.01 GI-(i} lower ' food. 7x 10-4 6 x 10° 1.0 60 Lung-{i) ; These and similar data have been considered in establishing for man the maximum permissible concentrations in air, water, and food. The values for some of the rare earth nuclides are presented in Table 4, 0.3 GI-(1) 4 tio! 7e10 in by inhalation reaches the critical organs for these nuclides. 7 x 10 5 pang” (4) As Sointemtina4s ‘Jee GI-(i) Bone-(s) 570 1500 ——— a 7 burden in GI -(s) 1500 ; =. eee ) tion of the longer-lived rare earth nuclides taken Effec- Critica] total body (microcuries per cubic centimeter) By tive organ* (microcuries) Wateré Air ingestion 290 4#20 ments pass from the gastrointestinal tract to the blood. It was found also that only a small frac- Maximum permissible concentrations of some rare earth radionuclides in air and in water for occupational exposure (Frou: K.Z. Morgan, 1960). Half-life (days) , increased in the liver. The relatively rapid uptake by the liver suggested that some of the cerium was in the Mmuunts tn muscle, liver, kidney, lung, gills, od ukeletai tassues of fish (Thomas et al., 1958; Morouxhs et al., 1956; Cerium-144 was eliminated rapidly from the gastrointestinal tract but Baemples collydged at the Eniwetok Proving Ground how that Ce Experi- ments have shown that rats subjected to aerosols containing lanthanum-140 (Cohn et al., 1957) and cerium-144 (Hennacy, 1961) had a relatively high farcer ings after a onepassage of diva tise solution, and that with the es in rsere was a redistribution of the nuclid At one day they were found mainly in Lissues At one month the radioactivity in the liser he ene was twice as high as that in the liver. from Mther results, including those obtained 4x , . 3 x 107°° 7.5 x 1077 107" j insoluble, ad } i ‘ La Yan

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