The gastrointestinal absorption of 210Po was determined by comparing tissue retention after oral and systemic administration. The results indicate an increase in absorption in adult rats for 210Po administered in liver compared with 210Po nitrate with estimated absorption of 5 and 13%, respectively. For 210Po citrate, values of about 7% were obtained in 1-day-old neonate and adult rats while absorption in guinea pigs was estimated to be about 23% in 1-day-old neonates, 17% in 5-day-old neonates, and 9% in adults. Gut retention of ingested 210Po in neonates was high in rats but not guinea pigs. In adult animals, but not neonates, the liver accounted for a greater proportion of 210Po reaching the bloodstream after ingestion than after systemic injection. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to current assumptions made in the calculation of doses from 210Po.
Transfer of 210Po to the foetus measured 3 days after administration in rat and 7 days later in guinea pig increased with increasing gestational age to about 0.1% injected activity per rat foetus at birth and 0.6% per guinea pig foetus on day 57, corresponding to whole-body foetus:mother concentration ratios of about 0.1:1 in both species. The greatest concentrations of 210Po were measured in the rat yolk sac during its haemopoietic stage, an order of magnitude greater than concentrations in the placenta and two orders of magnitude greater than foetal concentrations. The results obtained have been used to estimate in utero doses to haemopoietic tissues, taking account of transfer to the blastocyst/egg cylinder, yolk sac, liver and bone marrow. The concentration ratios relative to maternal liver for these tissues were taken to be 1, 3, 0.1 and 0.05 respectively and were applied to periods of human gestation of 0-2.5, 2.5-6, 6-12 and 12-38 weeks respectively. For chronic maternal intake by ingestion of 210Po during the year of pregnancy giving a committed effective dose (CED) to the mother of 1 mSv, the total in utero dose to haemopoietic tissue was about 340 microSv compared with a maternal red bone marrow dose of 2.2 mSv. The yolk sac and bone marrow accounted for 66 and 27% of the in utero dose respectively. In addition, the total CED to the offspring was calculated assuming a whole-body foetus:mother concentration ratio of 0.1:1 and that the distribution of 210Po between tissues was the same in the foetus as in adults and children. For chronic intake of 210Po during the year of pregnancy as assumed above, the CED to the offspring was estimated to be 8% of that to the mother.
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