The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) has reviewed recent epidemiological evidence suggesting that, for the lens of the eye, the threshold in absorbed dose for the induction of deleterious health effects is about 0.5 Gy. On this basis, the Commission recommends that for occupational exposure in planned exposure situations, the equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye should be 20 mSv in a year, averaged over defined periods of 5 yr, with exposure not exceeding 50 mSv in any single year. This paper summarises the data that have been taken into account by the ICRP and critically examines whether the proposed downward revision of the dose limit is justified. Overall, it is concluded that the accumulating radiobiological and epidemiological evidence makes it more appropriate to treat cataract induction as a stochastic rather than a deterministic effect. Within this framework, it is illogical to have the same dose limit for the lens of the eye as for the whole body irradiated uniformly. This could be addressed either by removing the special dose limit for the lens of the eye, assigning it an appropriate tissue weighting factor and including it in the computation of the effective dose, or through a composite approach involving the use of a tissue weighting factor for effective dose computations together with a special limit on the equivalent dose to the lens of the eye to ensure that no individual was subject to an unacceptably high risk of induction of clinically significant cataracts.
Many countries have a programme for developing an underground geological disposal facility for radioactive waste. A case study is provided herein on the illustrative assessment of human health issues arising from the potential release of chemotoxic and radioactive substances from a generic geological disposal facility (GDF) for radioactive waste. The illustrative assessment uses a source-pathway-receptor methodology and considers a number of human exposure pathways. Estimated exposures are compared with authoritative toxicological assessment criteria. The possibility of additive and synergistic effects resulting from exposures to mixtures of chemical contaminants or a combination of radiotoxic and chemotoxic substances is considered. The case study provides an illustration of how to assess human health issues arising from chemotoxic species released from a GDF for radioactive waste and highlights potential difficulties associated with a lack of data being available with which to assess synergistic effects. It also highlights how such difficulties can be addressed.
The dosimetry of alpha-emitting radionuclides in bone is discussed. Results are presented for average dose rates to tissues close to endosteal surfaces and to haematopoietic bone marrow from thin plane sources of radionuclides buried to different depths in bone and emitting alpha-particles with energies in the range 3-8 MeV. These results are used to demonstrate that on an activity basis 239Pu is unlikely to be more than fifteen times as toxic as 226Ra with respect to osteosarcoma and leukaemia induction in man.
Describes how the distribution of alpha -emitting and fissionable radionuclides, in this case a mixture of uranium isotopes, in histological sections of lung can be measured using either the NIAR technique or alpha -autoradiography with cellulose nitrate films. Since both techniques allow the section to be preserved it was possible to use the same section for NIAR, for alpha -autoradiography and for delayed-neutron analysis. The delayed-neutron analysis made it possible to assay the total amount of uranium present in each section and thus to determine the absolute detection efficiencies of the NIAR and alpha autoradiographic techniques. The NIARS and alpha -autoradiographs allowed the authors to measure not only the total amount of uranium present in each section, but also its microscopic distribution.
The concentration of 18F was measured in three parts of the femur and in the blood of 36 mice killed at intervals of from 1 min to 2 h after intravenous injection. Blood supply to the bone sections, calculated by dividing the increase in 18F concentration in bone by the integral of 18F concentration in blood between selected time intervals, was shown to be unaffected by the return of 18F from bone to blood at times earlier than 90 min following injection. The supply of blood per unit mass of bone was greatest in distal end of the femur, less in proximal end and least in shaft. In whole femur average blood flow was 230 mm3 per gram fresh bone per min. The deposition of 239Pu in three parts of the mouse femur was shown to be linearly related to blood flow and the nature of the relationship is discussed.
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