Changes in soft tissue concentrations of plutonium and americium with time after human occupational exposure

1996 
Concentrations of {sup 239+240}Pu and {sup 241}Am in human soft tissues (testes, thyroid gland, kidneys, spleen, heart, skeletal muscle, brain, and pancreas) were compared to those in the livers of the same subject. The subjects were volunteer donors with occupational exposures to plutonium and americium autopsied as part of the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries program. The temporal distributions of tissue-to-liver ratios were compared to liver uptake fractions assumed on the basis of current models to estimate the initial uptake fractions for each tissue studied. Regressions of the ratios were used to compare tissue retention half-times of those of the liver. Effective half-times for plutonium and americium in the tissues studied were similiar to those for the liver with three exceptions: (1) the clearance half-time for plutonium in kidneys is shorter that that of liver; (2) the retention half-time for plutonium is testes is longer that that of liver; and (3) the retention half-time for americium in skeletal muscle was longer than in the liver. Next to liver, the greatest initial uptake of systemic actinides was in skeletal muscle and the greatest initial concentrations were in the spleen. The uptake fraction of plutonium in the testes proposed by themore » ICRP was verified. 20 refs., 2 figs., 5 tabs.« less
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