Plutonium-239 and americium-241 were administered to adult hamsters in various chemical forms and their absorption from the gut was measured. The results have been compared with published data on other species in order to derive values for the estimated absorption of these actinides in man. On the basis of current knowledge, the best values for adults would appear to be: 0.05% for americium, 0.01% for plutonium ingested in soluble form, and 0.0001% for plutonium ingested as the dioxide. Plutonium dioxide should be considered as soluble if a significant proportion (greater than 5%) of the activity is in particles less than 25 nm in diameter.
Wound contamination was simulated by the intramuscular injections of either 239Pu, 241Am or 244Cm nitrate in the hamster and by the subcutaneous injection of either 239Pu or 241Am nitrate in the rat. The actinides moved from the hamster muscle at approximately the same rate after injection of 370 Bq of each radionuclide (approximate 80 per cent cleared after 6 months). Similarly, the rates of translocation of 239Pu and 241Am in the rat were the same after injection of 370 Bq of each radionuclide (approximate 80 per cent cleared after 1 month). The clearance of 239Pu in the rat was slower after injection of 14.8 kBq and more rapid after injection of 20 Bq (approximately 40 per cent and 90 per cent moved after 1 month, respectively) while the movement of 241Am showed no dependence on the administered dose over the same range. The mixing of 239Pu and 241Am prior to intramuscular injection appeared to enhance the clearance of both radionuclides. The levels of accumulation of each actinide in the skeleton and liver of both species showed that they reached the circulation predominantly in soluble form. Some uptake of Pu and Am in regional lymph nodes was also observed, indicating that lymphatic clearance of polymeric material also took place.
Hamsters aged 1, 4, 7, 22 and 30 days were given oral doses of either plutonium-239 citrate or americium-241 nitrate. The values of gastrointestinal absorption obtained were 3.5, 1.4, 0.04, 0.007 and 0.003 per cent, respectively, for plutonium and 4.5, 1.7, 0.5, 0.006 and 0.02 per cent, respectively, for americium, compared with values in adults of 0.01 per cent for plutonium and 0.05 per cent for americium. The absorption of neptunium was measured in hamsters aged 2 and 4 days and values of 2.3 and 1.7 per cent, respectively, were obtained for 239Np as the nitrate and 5.5 and 2.1 per cent, respectively, for 239Np as the bicarbonate compared with the values in adults of 0.02 per cent for both chemical forms. Thus, the absorption of plutonium, americium and neptunium at 1-2 days of age was about 100 times greater than in adults. The results for plutonium and americium show that absorption decreased rapidly with age over the suckling period. The values of absorption obtained at the time of weaning at 22 days were lower than in adults.
The gastrointestinal absorption of neptunium at low mass concentrations as 239Np nitrate (0.5-1 ng Np; 2-5 micrograms l-1) has been found to be 0.03, 0.02 and 0.18 per cent in adult rats, hamsters and rabbits, respectively. Administration as 239Np bicarbonate increased uptake in the rat to 0.15 per cent but had no significant effect on uptake in either the hamster or the rabbit. Absorption in the rat was also increased to 0.14 per cent for 239Np citrate but not for either 239Np phytate (0.04 per cent) or 239Np incorporated into rat liver (0.01 per cent). The fasting of rats for 8 hours increased their subsequent absorption of 239Np as the bicarbonate to 0.25 per cent. The absorption of neptunium at high mass concentrations as 237Np nitrate (0.5 mg Np, 5 g l-1) was increased to 0.26 per cent in the rat compared with the value of 0.03 per cent for 239Np (0.5 ng, 5 micrograms l-1) but a similar effect of concentration was not observed in the hamster. The results support the use of a value of absorption of 0.1 per cent instead of 1 per cent in calculations of annual limits on intake of radioisotopes of neptunium by workers and in estimates of radiation doses resulting from the ingestion of contaminated food and water by adult members of the public.
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