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Journal ArticleDOI

USTUR case 0259 whole body donation: a comprehensive test of the current ICRP models for the behavior of inhaled 238PuO2 ceramic particles. U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries.

A C James, +3 more
- 01 Jan 2003 - 
- Vol. 84, Iss: 1, pp 2-33
TLDR
An analysis of 238 Pu in the whole body donation to the U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR) is presented and it was determined that the ICRP models provided an adequate estimate of the overall effective dose.
Abstract
An analysis of 238Pu in the whole body donation to the U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR) is presented. This donor accidentally inhaled an unusual physical form of plutonium, predominantly the 238Pu isotope in the form of a highly insoluble ceramic. Along with six other workers accidentally exposed at the same time, this donor excreted little or no 238Pu in his urine for several months. Subsequently, however, and, with no further intakes, the urinary excretion of 238Pu by all of these workers increased progressively. Such a pattern of increasing urinary excretion of plutonium resulting from a single acute inhalation was unknown at the time. The subject of this study provided a unique opportunity to analyze not only the pattern of urinary excretion for 17 y following this unusual intake but also the complete distribution of 238Pu in his donated body tissues and skeleton at death. Radiochemical analyses of tissues from this whole body donation were used to perform critical tests of the applicability and accuracy of the respiratory tract model and the systemic biokinetic models for plutonium currently recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection. The respiratory tract model was applied to analyze the donor's long-term urinary excretion pattern. The facility provided by this model to represent progressive transformation of insoluble particles in the lungs into a more soluble form, applied in conjunction with the systemic biokinetic model, predicted the total amount of 238Pu measured in the donor's body to within 17% accuracy. The measured division of 238Pu between the donor's lungs and systemic organs was predicted to within 10%. Small adjustments to several rate constants in these models provided precise predictions of the absolute amounts of 238Pu in the lungs, thoracic lymph nodes, liver, red bone marrow, skeleton (including the distribution of 238Pu between trabecular and cortical bone matrices derived from the radiochemical analyses), kidneys, testes, and muscle. The resulting individual-specific parameters were applied to evaluate the equivalent dose rates and cumulative doses received by the donor's organs and the overall effective dose. Whereas these individual modifications to the ICRP models provided a more accurate representation of the distribution of dose between the donor's organs, it was determined that the ICRP models provided an adequate estimate of the overall effective dose.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Human Respiratory Tract Model for Radiological Protection

TL;DR: The new respiratory tract model, which applies explicitly to workers and to all members of the general public inhaling gases, vapour or particles, permits the evaluation of dose per unit intake or exposure as well as the interpretation of bioassay data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and Excretion of Plutonium Administered Intravenously to Man

TL;DR: The results of the studies conducted by the Berkeley and Chicago groups are correlated with the present ones providing a collection of data from sixteen cases as mentioned in this paper, including the twelve tracer cases mentioned above.
Journal Article

The U.S. Transuranium Registry report of the 241Am content of a whole body. Part IV: Preparation and analysis of the tissues and bones.

TL;DR: The soft tissues and organs containing the largest amounts of 241Am were the combined soft tissue (striated muscle, connective tissue and skin) 8.8%; liver, 6.4% and respiratory tract, 1.5%.
Journal ArticleDOI

A microcomputer algorithm for solving first-order compartmental models involving recycling.

TL;DR: A general algorithm for solving first-order compartmental models including recycling systems has been developed and its implementation on a microcomputer is described, which is ideally suited to solve kinetic models describing the transport of radionuclides in the environment or the translocation of elements in biological systems.
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