A major factor influencing the movement of plutonium-238 from the lungs to blood after the intubation of oxide suspensions is the presense of 0.001 micrometer diameter particles. In a polydisperse suspension of particles this fraction increases with time, due it is thought, to fragmentation of larger particles induced by alpha decay. The rate of this process could account for the greater transportability in vivo of plutonium-238 relative to plutonium-239 when the oxides are inhaled. In blood, 0.001 micrometer diameter plutonium-238 oxide particles undergo a rapid reaction to form a low molecular weight species before plutonium is complexed with transferrin and citrate ions. The filtration of this species through the kidneys may explain the observed enhanced urinary excretion of plutonium relative to administered plutonium citrate. The mechanism of urinary excretion and relationship between cumulative urinary excretion and body content for plutonium-238 is similar to that previously observed for plutonium-239, even though different methods of preparation of the oxides were used.
The gastrointestinal absorption of Np and Cm has been determined in five male adult volunteers. The Np and Cm, which were in citrate solution, were taken with food. An initial experiment with each individual determined the fraction of each element excreted in the urine following intravenous administration. Subsequently, the results for urinary excretion for the two routes of administration were used to calculate the fractional absorption (f1) of ingested Np and Cm. The mean f1 values were: Np (2.0 +/- 0.2) X 10(-4), range (1.2-2.9) X 10(-4), and Cm (1.7 +/- 0.3) X 10(-4), range (0.95-3.0) X 10(-4), the quoted uncertainties being the standard error of the means. Currently, the International Commission on Radiological Protection recommends a value of 10(-3) for both elements. Cumulative urinary excretion over 1 wk after intravenous injection accounted for about 20%-40% of administered Np and 7%-10% of Cm. At the conclusion of the experiment, the total committed effective dose equivalent for each volunteer was calculated to be in the range 130-250 microSv, based on the individual f1 values, and, in some cases, a knowledge of the rate of clearance of 239Np through the gut as measured by whole-body counting.
Concentrations of a range of naturally occurring radionuclides have been determined in the same crops grown at two sites in the UK. Ovine liver has also been studied. One site was in an area where concentrations in soil are typical of the UK (the 'control' site) and the other in an area where levels were well above average (the 'test' site). For an average adult consumer of all of the foodstuffs studied, the doses from consumption for the test site were about 4 times higher than those for the control site. However, the differences were small compared with the variability in overall doses from natural background across the UK. 210Pb and 210Po were important contributors to doses for both sites, but at the test site the contribution from 226Ra was also significant. Of the foodstuffs studied, consumption of leafy vegetables and liver gave the highest doses. The doses from leafy vegetables were sensitive to the weather conditions prior to harvesting. Consequently, rigorous monitoring programmes should be based on several samples collected throughout the year; extrapolations based on a single annual sample are unlikely to be reliable.
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