Absorption of isotopes of the actinide elements Np, Pu, Am and Cm from various organic media and/or in combination with plant or animal ligands or tissue is compared with their absorption from an inorganic nitrate medium. Gastrointestinal (GI) transport of 238Pu, 239Pu, 241Am and 244Cm at high concentrations from citrate medium by adult rats and/or mice was higher than from nitric acid medium. Neptunium-237 absorption, however, was not increased by citrate; probably because its oxidation state was reduced from 237Np(V) to 237Np(IV) by the medium and by the GI content. Increasing the mass of the 237Np dose resulted in increased absorption. Neither incorporation of 238Pu in rat liver nor retention of 238Pu oxide in rat lungs enhanced absorption when those Pu-containing tissues were administered intragastrically to either adult or neonatal rats. Ranking of GI absorption of the various forms of Pu gavaged in these studies suggests that transport is in the order: Pu citrate greater than Pu phytate greater than biologically incorporated Pu greater than Pu nitrate.
Groups of rats were exposed to aerosols of 237Np nitrate to determine clearance rates, retention and distribution at various intervals after inhalation. Initial lung burdens (ILB) after 237Np inhalation by three treatment groups were 0.12, 0.19 and 0.37 mu Ci/kg, respectively. Radiochemical analyses of animals killed at 4, 8, 14, 28 and 90 d, as well as data for others maintained until they became moribund, showed that their lung clearance followed a three-compartment model, clearance half-times for which were 1, 35, and 10,000 d, respectively. Only 3% of the ILB was retained after 90 d; 12% of that burden had translocated to the skeleton at 750 d; the half-time for skeletal retention was 2500 d. A single tumor was the only malignancy detected in the lungs of the 35 animals allowed to survive the early phase of the study.
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