45 results on '"Avtandilashvili M"'
Search Results
2. Monitoring of the Radioecological Situation in Marine and Coastal Environment of Georgia
- Author
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Avtandilashvili, M., Baratashvili, D., Dunker, R., N., Mazmanidi, Pagava, S., Robakidze, Z., Rusetski, V., Togonidze, G., Zaidi, Mohammed K., editor, and Mustafaev, Islam, editor
- Published
- 2004
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3. The Mayak Worker Dosimetry System (MWDS 2013): Soluble Plutonium Retention in the Lungs of An Occupationally Exposed USTUR Case
- Author
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Tolmachev, S. Y., primary, Nielsen, C. E., additional, Avtandilashvili, M., additional, Puncher, M., additional, Martinez, F., additional, Thomas, E. M., additional, Miller, F. L., additional, Morgan, W. F., additional, and Birchall, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
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4. THE MAYAK WORKER DOSIMETRY SYSTEM (MWDS 2013): SOLUBLE PLUTONIUM RETENTION IN THE LUNGS OF AN OCCUPATIONALLY EXPOSED USTUR CASE.
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Tolmachev, S. Y., Nielsen, C. E., Avtandilashvili, M., Puncher, M., Martinez, F., Thomas, E. M., Miller, F. L., Morgan, W. F., and Birchall, A.
- Subjects
PLUTONIUM in the body ,OCCUPATIONAL hazards ,LUNG physiology ,RADIATION dosimetry ,NUCLEAR industry personnel - Abstract
For the first time, plutonium retention in human upper airways was investigated based on the dosimetric structure of the human respiratory tract proposed by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP). This paper describes analytical work methodology, case selection criteria, and summarizes findings on soluble (ICRP 68 Type M material) plutonium distribution in the lungs of a former nuclear worker occupationally exposed to plutonium nitrate [
239 Pu(NO3 )4 ]. Thirty-eight years post-intake, plutonium was found to be uniformly distributed between bronchial (BB), bronchiolar (bb) and alveolar-interstitial (AI) dosimetric compartments as well as between the left and right lungs.239+240 Pu and238 Pu total body activity was estimated to be 2333 ± 23 and 42.1 ± 0.7 Bq, respectively. The results of this work provide key information on the extent of plutonium binding in the upper airways of the human respiratory tract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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5. Latent Bone Modeling Approach to Estimate Plutonium Activity Concentration in Human Skeleton.
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Zhou, J. Y., Avtandilashvili, M., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
- Published
- 2022
6. Latent Bone Modeling Approach to Select Best Combination of Bones for Estimating Plutonium Activity Concentration in Human Skeleton.
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Tolmachev, S. Y., Avtandilashvili, M., and Zhou, J. Y.
- Published
- 2022
7. Monitoring of the Radioecological Situation in Marine and Coastal Environment of Georgia
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Avtandilashvili, M., primary, Baratashvili, D., additional, Dunker, R., additional, N., Mazmanidi, additional, Pagava, S., additional, Robakidze, Z., additional, Rusetski, V., additional, and Togonidze, G., additional
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8. The Professional-Oriented Regional Radioecological Collaboration of Southern Caucasian States
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Avtandilashvili, M., primary, Pagava, S., additional, Robakidze, Z., additional, and Rusetski, V., additional
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9. INITIAL INVESTIGATION OF 222Rn IN THE TBILISI URBAN ENVIRONMENT
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Pagava, S, primary, Rusetski, V, additional, Robakidze, Z, additional, Farfán, E B., additional, Dunker, R E., additional, Popp, J L., additional, Avtandilashvili, M, additional, Wells, D P., additional, and Donnelly, E H., additional
- Published
- 2008
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10. Uncertainty Evaluation of Skeleton Plutonium Activity Concentration Estimated from a Latent Bone Model.
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Zhou, J. Y., Avtandilashvili, M., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
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- 2022
11. Effect of Osteoporosis on Latent Bone Models to Estimate Plutonium Activity Concentration in Human Skeleton.
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Tolmachev, S. Y., Avtandilashvili, M., and Zhou, J. Y.
- Published
- 2022
12. Comparison of two methods to estimate skeletal plutonium concentration from limited sets of bones.
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Tabatadze, G., Avtandilashvili, M., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
- Published
- 2022
13. USTUR Whole-body Case 0680: 53-year Follow-up of a Manhattan Project Worker.
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Šefl, M., Avtandilashvili, M., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
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- 2022
14. Analysis of Long-term Retention of Plutonium in the Respiratory Tract Tissues of Four Workers: Bound Fraction vs. Scar-tissue Compartments.
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Poudel, D., Avtandilashvili, M., Klumpp, J. A., Bertelli, L., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
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- 2022
15. Uncertainty Analysis on Organ Activities and Intakes from Occupational Exposure to Plutonium.
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Šefl, M., Zhou, J. Y., Avtandilashvili, M., McComish, S. L., Strom, D. J., Tabatadze, G., and Tolmachev, S. Y.
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- 2022
16. Radiocarbon and 11-Year Variations of Cosmic Rays
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Burchuladze, A. A., primary, Pagava, S. V., additional, Togonidze, G. I., additional, and Avtandilashvili, M. V., additional
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- 1993
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17. INITIAL INVESTIGATION OF 222Rn IN THE TBILISI URBAN ENVIRONMENT.
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Pagava, S., Rusetski, V., Robakidze, Z., Farfán, E. B., Dunker, R. E., Popp, J. L., Avtandilashvili, M., Wells, D. P., and Donnelly, E. H.
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,RADON ,CARBON isotopes ,MEDICAL physics - Abstract
The article presents a research on the initial investigation of
222 Rn in the Tbilisi urban environment. The research presents a preliminary investigation of radion on Tbilisi, Georgia, initiated by an idependent radiological monitoring program in Radiocarbon and Low-Level Counting Section of I. It also notes that at this initial stage, the E-PERM systems and GammaTRACER were used for the measurement of gamma exposire and radon concentrations in air and water. The research concludes that there is a wide range of the radon-in-air concentration observed in Tbilisi and adds that these observations are in agreement with the worldwide data displaying a common excess of the annual effective dose caused by radon.- Published
- 2008
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18. The United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries: Fifty-year History of Actinide Biokinetic Research
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Avtandilashvili Maia, McComish Stacey L., and Tolmachev Sergei Y.
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Published
- 2019
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19. USTUR: Expanding horizons for actinide biokinetics and dosimetry
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Tolmachev Sergei Y., McComish Stacey L., and Avtandilashvili Maia
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Published
- 2019
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20. Biokinetics of soluble plutonium after wound injury treated with Ca-DTPA
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Avtandilashvili Maia and Tolmachev Sergei Y.
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Published
- 2019
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21. "SCAN RATES" -- A FORM-BASED EXCEL SPREADSHEET TO MODEL THE DETECTABILITY OF SURFACE RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION.
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Avtandilashvili, M., Butikofer, T., Matthews, T., and Cummings, R.
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RADIOACTIVE pollution - Abstract
This section presents an abstract of the research paper "Scan Rates: A Form-Based Excel Spreadsheet to Model the Detectability of Surface Radioactive Contamination," by M. Avtandilashvili, T. Butikofer, T. Matthews and R. Cummings.
- Published
- 2008
22. Modeling Plutonium Decorporation in a Female Nuclear Worker Treated with Ca-DTPA after Inhalation Intake.
- Author
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Dumit S, Avtandilashvili M, McComish SL, Miller G, Swanson J, and Tolmachev SY
- Abstract
Abstract: The present work models plutonium (Pu) biokinetics in a female former nuclear worker. Her bioassay measurements are available at the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries. The worker was internally exposed to a plutonium-americium mixture via acute inhalation at a nuclear weapons facility. She was medically treated with injections of 1 g Ca-DTPA on days 0, 5, and 14 after the intake. Between days 0 and 20, fecal and urine samples were collected and analyzed for 239Pu and 241Am. Subsequently, she was followed up for bioassay monitoring over 14 y, with additional post-treatment urine samples collected and analyzed for 239Pu. The uniqueness of this dataset is due to the availability of: (1) both early and long-term bioassay data from a female with plutonium intake; (2) data on chelation therapy for a female; and (3) fecal measurement results. Chelation therapy with Ca- and/or Zn-salts of DTPA is known to aid in reducing the internal radiation dose by enhancing the excretion of plutonium and americium from the body. Such enhancement affects plutonium biokinetics in the human body, posing a challenge to the internal dose assessment. The current radiation dose assessment practice is to exclude the data affected by Ca-DTPA from the analysis. The present analysis is the first to explicitly model the chelation-affected bioassay data in a female by using a newly developed chelation model. Thus, the bioassay data collected during and after the Ca-DTPA administrations were used for biokinetic modeling and dose assessment. The Markov Chain Monte Carlo method was used to investigate model parameter uncertainty, based on the bioassay data and assumed prior probability distributions. A χ2/nData (number of data points) ≈ 1 was observed in this study, which indicates self-consistency of the data with the model. Results of this study show that the worker's 239Pu intake was 12 Bq, with a committed effective dose to the whole-body of 1.2 mSv and a committed equivalent dose to the bone surfaces, liver, and lungs of 37.8, 9.1, and 0.8 mSv, respectively. This study also discusses the worker's dose reduction due to chelation treatment., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Health Physics Society.)
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- 2024
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23. Long-term retention and distribution of highly enriched uranium in an occupationally exposed female.
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Tolmachev SY and Avtandilashvili M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Lung, Bone and Bones, Uranium analysis
- Abstract
The United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries' (USTUR) female whole body tissue donor studied here was occupationally exposed to highly enriched uranium for 17 years. One hundred and twenty-nine tissue samples were collected at the time of death, 31 years post-exposure. These samples were radiochemically analyzed for uranium. The highest uranium concentration of 16.5 ± 2.0 µg kg
-1 was measured in the lungs, and the lowest concentration of 0.11 ± 0.01 µg kg-1 in the liver. The thyroid had the highest concentration of 6.3 ± 2.9 µg kg-1 among systemic tissues. Mass-weighted average concentration in the entire skeleton was estimated to be 1.60 ± 0.19 µg kg-1 . In the skeleton, uranium was non-uniformly distributed among different bones. Thirty-one years after the intake, approximately 40% of occupational uranium was still retained in the skeleton, followed by the kidneys (~ 30%), and the brain and liver (~ 10%). Systemic uranium was equally distributed between the skeleton and soft tissues. Uranium content in systemic organs followed the pattern: skeleton > > brain ≈ kidneys > heart ≈ liver > thyroid ≈ spleen. Uranium distribution in this female was compared to previously published USTUR data for male tissue donors. It is concluded that no difference in uranium systemic distribution was observed between female and male individuals. It is demonstrated that dose assessment based on the current ICRP biokinetic model overestimated the dose to the brain by 20%., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2024
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24. Forty-eight-year follow-up of a female worker exposed to highly enriched uranium via chronic and acute inhalation.
- Author
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Avtandilashvili M and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Radiometry, Radioisotopes, Software, Radiation Dosage, Uranium, Occupational Exposure analysis
- Abstract
The United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR) is a unique resource of data and materials for studying biokinetics of uranium in the human body. In this study, bioassay data and post-mortem organ activities from a female whole-body USTUR donor who was exposed to highly enriched uranium were analyzed using the IMBA Professional Plus® software to derive the best estimate of the total intake. The resulting radiation doses delivered to this individual's whole body and major target organs were calculated from estimated intake based on case-specific dose coefficients derived using the AIDE® software. Both intake and dose calculations were carried out using the biokinetic and dosimetric models recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) in its Occupational Intakes of Radionuclides publication series. Different exposure scenarios including chronic and acute inhalation intakes were tested. A combination of a chronic inhalation intake and two acute inhalation intakes appears to best describe the bioassay data. To fit this female individual's autopsy data, the transfer rate from the liver to the blood was increased by a factor of 8 and the transfer rate from the kidneys to the blood was decreased by a factor of 2.2. This resulted in the best fit to all data (p = 0.519). The total intake was estimated to be 44.1 kBq, and the committed effective dose was 211 mSv with 96.8% contributed by
234 U. 96.6% of the committed effective dose was contributed by the lungs. The remaining 3.4% of the committed effective dose was contributed by all systemic tissues and organs with the highest contribution (0.40%) from the red bone marrow. It is concluded that the current ICRP models, with the adjustment for smoking status, adequately describe uranium biokinetics for this individual except retention in the liver and kidneys. However, this study was based on a single case and may not be sufficient to identify any apparent sex-specific differences in uranium biokinetics., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2024
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25. Modified human respiratory tract model to describe the retention of plutonium in scar tissues.
- Author
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
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- Animals, Humans, United States, Radiation Dosage, Cicatrix metabolism, Models, Biological, Respiratory System metabolism, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
The Human Respiratory Tract Model described in Publication 130 of the International Commission on Radiological Protection provides some mechanisms to account for retention of material that can be subject to little to no mechanical transport or absorption into the blood. One of these mechanisms is 'binding', which refers to a process by which a fraction ('bound fraction') of the dissolved material chemically binds to the tissue of the airway wall. The value of the bound fraction can have a significant impact on the radiation doses imparted to different parts of the respiratory tract. To properly evaluate-and quantify-bound fraction for an element, one would need information on long-term retention of the element in individual compartments of the respiratory tract. Such data on regional retention of plutonium in the respiratory tract of four workers-who had inhaled materials with solubility ranging from soluble nitrate to very insoluble high-fired oxides-were obtained at the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries. An assumption of bound fraction alone was found to be inconsistent with this dataset and also with a review of the literature. Several studies show evidence of retention of a large amount of Pu activity in the scar tissues of humans and experimental animals, and accordingly, a model structure with scar-tissue compartments was proposed. The transfer rates to these compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of the bioassay and post-mortem data, considering the uncertainties associated with deposition, dissolution and particle clearance parameters. The models predicted that a significant amount-between 20 and 100% for the cases analyzed-of plutonium retained in the respiratory tract was sequestered in the scar tissues. Unlike chemically-bound Pu that irradiates sensitive epithelial cells, Pu in scar tissues may not be dosimetrically significant because the scar tissues absorb most, if not all, of the energy from alpha emissions., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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26. Latent bone modelling for estimation of plutonium concentration in skeleton of former nuclear workers.
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Šefl M, Zhou JY, Avtandilashvili M, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Humans, Skeleton, Radiopharmaceuticals, Registries, Uncertainty, Plutonium
- Abstract
The skeleton is a major plutonium retention site in the human body. Estimation of the total plutonium activity in the skeleton is a challenging problem. For most tissue donors at the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries, a limited number of bone samples is available. The skeleton activity is calculated using plutonium activity concentration (Cskel) and skeleton weight. In this study, latent bone modelling was used to estimate Cskel from the limited number of analysed bone samples. Data from 13 non-osteoporotic whole-body donors were used to develop latent bone model (LBM) to estimate Cskel for seven cases with four to eight analysed bone samples. LBM predictions were compared to Cskel estimated using an arithmetic mean in terms of accuracy and precision. For the studied cases, LBM offered a significant reduction of uncertainty of Cskel estimate., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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27. Methods of improving brain dose estimates for internally deposited radionuclides .
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Leggett RW, Tolmachev SY, Avtandilashvili M, Eckerman KF, Grogan HA, Sgouros G, Woloschak GE, Samuels C, and Boice JD Jr
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- Brain, Kinetics, Models, Biological, Radiation Dosage, Radiometry methods, Radiation Protection, Radioisotopes
- Abstract
The US National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) convened Scientific Committee 6-12 (SC 6-12) to examine methods for improving dose estimates for brain tissue for internally deposited radionuclides, with emphasis on alpha emitters. This Memorandum summarises the main findings of SC 6-12 described in the recently published NCRP Commentary No. 31, 'Development of Kinetic and Anatomical Models for Brain Dosimetry for Internally Deposited Radionuclides'. The Commentary examines the extent to which dose estimates for the brain could be improved through increased realism in the biokinetic and dosimetric models currently used in radiation protection and epidemiology. A limitation of most of the current element-specific systemic biokinetic models is the absence of brain as an explicitly identified source region with its unique rate(s) of exchange of the element with blood. The brain is usually included in a large source region called Other that contains all tissues not considered major repositories for the element. In effect, all tissues in Other are assigned a common set of exchange rates with blood. A limitation of current dosimetric models for internal emitters is that activity in the brain is treated as a well-mixed pool, although more sophisticated models allowing consideration of different activity concentrations in different regions of the brain have been proposed. Case studies for 18 internal emitters indicate that brain dose estimates using current dosimetric models may change substantially (by a factor of 5 or more), or may change only modestly, by addition of a sub-model of the brain in the biokinetic model, with transfer rates based on results of published biokinetic studies and autopsy data for the element of interest. As a starting place for improving brain dose estimates, development of biokinetic models with explicit sub-models of the brain (when sufficient biokinetic data are available) is underway for radionuclides frequently encountered in radiation epidemiology. A longer-term goal is development of coordinated biokinetic and dosimetric models that address the distribution of major radioelements among radiosensitive brain tissues., (© 2022 Society for Radiological Protection. Published on behalf of SRP by IOP Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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28. Radium dial workers: back to the future.
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Martinez NE, Jokisch DW, Dauer LT, Eckerman KF, Goans RE, Brockman JD, Tolmachev SY, Avtandilashvili M, Mumma MT, Boice JD Jr, and Leggett RW
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Radioisotopes analysis, Radiometry methods, United States, Radiation Injuries, Radiation Protection, Radium
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper reviews the history of the radium dial workers in the United States, summarizes the scientific progress made since the last evaluation in the early 1990s, and discusses current progress in updating the epidemiologic cohort and applying new dosimetric models for radiation risk assessment., Background: The discoveries of radiation and radioactivity led quickly to medical and commercial applications at the turn of the 20th century, including the development of radioluminescent paint, made by combining radium with phosphorescent material and adhesive. Workers involved with the painting of dials and instruments included painters, handlers, ancillary workers, and chemists who fabricated the paint. Dial painters were primarily women and, prior to the mid to late 1920s, would use their lips to give the brush a fine point, resulting in high intakes of radium. The tragic experience of the dial painters had a significant impact on industrial safety standards, including protection measures taken during the Manhattan Project. The dial workers study has formed the basis for radiation protection standards for intakes of radionuclides by workers and the public., Epidemiologic Approach: The mortality experience of 3,276 radium dial painters and handlers employed between 1913 and 1949 is being determined through 2019. The last epidemiologic follow-up was 30 years ago when most of these workers were still alive. Nearly 65% were born before 1920, 37.5% were teenagers when first hired, and nearly 50% were hired before 1930 when the habit of placing brushes in mouths essentially stopped. Comprehensive dose reconstruction techniques are being applied to estimate organ doses for each worker related to the intake of
226 Ra,228 Ra, and associated photon exposures. Time dependent dose-response analyses will estimate lifetime risks for specific causes of death., Discussion: The study of radium dial workers is part of the Million Person Study of low-dose health effects that is designed to evaluate radiation risks among healthy American workers and veterans. Despite being one of the most important and influential radiation effects studies ever conducted, shifting programmatic responsibilities and declining funding led to the termination of the radium program of studies in the early 1990s. Renewed interest and opportunity have arisen. With scientific progress made in dosimetric methodology and models, the ability to perform a study over the entire life span, and the potential applicability to other scenarios such as medicine, environmental contamination and space exploration, the radium dial workers have once again come to the forefront.- Published
- 2022
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29. Modelling of long-term retention of high-fired plutonium oxide in the human respiratory tract: importance of scar-tissue compartments.
- Author
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
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- Cicatrix, Humans, Lung chemistry, Oxides, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
The U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries whole-body tissue donor Case 0407 had an acute intake of 'high-fired' plutonium oxide resulting from a glove-box fire in a fabrication plant at a nuclear defence facility. The respiratory tract of this individual was dissected into five regions (larynx, bronchi, bronchioles, alveolar-interstitial, and thoracic lymph nodes) and analysed for plutonium content. The activities in certain compartments of the respiratory tract were found to be higher than expected from the default models described in publications of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Because of the extremely slow rate of dissolution of the material inhaled, the presence of bound fraction is incapable of explaining the higher-than-expected retention. A plausible hypothesis-encapsulation of plutonium in scar tissues-is supported by the review of literature. Therefore, scar-tissue compartments corresponding to the larynx, bronchi, bronchioles and alveolar-interstitial regions were added to the existing human respiratory tract model structure. The transfer rates between these compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of data on urinary excretion, lung counts and post-mortem measurements of the liver, skeleton and regional retention in the respiratory tract. Modelling of the data showed that approximately 30% of plutonium activity in the lung was sequestered in scar tissues. The dose consequence of such sequestration is qualitatively compared against that of chemical binding., (© 2020 Society for Radiological Protection. Published on behalf of SRP by IOP Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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30. Four-decade follow-up of a plutonium-contaminated puncture wound treated with Ca-DTPA.
- Author
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Avtandilashvili M and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Models, Biological, Pentetic Acid, Punctures, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Injuries
- Abstract
Contaminated wounds are a common route of internal deposition of radionuclides for nuclear and radiation workers. They may result in significant doses to radiosensitive organs and tissues in an exposed individual's body. The United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries' whole-body donor (Case 0303) accidentally punctured his finger on equipment contaminated with plutonium nitrate. The wound was surgically excised and medically treated with intravenous injections of Ca-DTPA. A total of 16 g Ca-DTPA was administered in 18 treatments during the 2 months following the accident. Ninety-three urine samples were collected and analysed over 14 years following the accident. An estimated
239 Pu activity of 73.7 Bq was excreted during Ca-DTPA treatment. Post-mortem radiochemical analysis of autopsy tissues indicated that 40 years post-accident 21.6 ± 0.2 Bq of239 Pu was retained in the skeleton, 12.2 ± 0.3 Bq in the liver, and 3.7 ± 0.1 Bq in other soft tissues; 1.35 ± 0.02 Bq of239 Pu was measured in tissue samples from the wound site. To estimate the plutonium intake, late urine measurements, which were unaffected by chelation, and post-mortem radiochemical analysis results were evaluated using the IMBA Professional Plus software. The application of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements wound model with an assumption of intake material as a predominantly strongly retained soluble plutonium compound with a small insoluble fraction adequately described the data ( p = 0.46). The effective intake was estimated to be 50.2 Bq of plutonium nitrate and 1.5 Bq of the fragment. The prompt medical intervention with contaminated tissue excision and subsequent Ca-DTPA decorporation therapy reduced239 Pu activity available for uptake and long-term retention in this individual's systemic organs by a factor of 38., (© 2021 Society for Radiological Protection. Published on behalf of SRP by IOP Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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31. MODELING THE LONG-TERM RETENTION OF PLUTONIUM IN THE HUMAN RESPIRATORY TRACT USING SCAR-TISSUE COMPARTMENTS.
- Author
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Humans, Lung chemistry, United States, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Protection
- Abstract
The respiratory tract tissues of four former nuclear workers with plutonium intakes were radiochemically analyzed post mortem by the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries. Plutonium activities in the upper respiratory tract of these individuals were found to be higher than those predicted using the most recent biokinetic models described in publications of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Modification of the model parameters, including the bound fraction, was not able to explain the data in one of the four individuals who had inhaled insoluble form of plutonium. Literature review points to the presence of-and a significant retention of-plutonium in the scar tissues of the lungs. Accordingly, an alternate model with scar-tissue compartments corresponding to larynx, bronchi, bronchioles, alveolar-interstitium and thoracic lymph nodes was proposed. The rates of transfer to the scar tissue compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of data on urinary excretion, lung counts and post-mortem measurements of liver, skeleton and individual respiratory tract compartments, as available. The posterior models predicted that 20-100%-depending on the solubility of the material inhaled-of the activities retained in the respiratory tract were sequestered in the scar tissues., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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32. Plutonium in Manhattan Project workers: Using autopsy data to evaluate organ content and dose estimates based on urine bioassay with implications for radiation epidemiology.
- Author
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Šefl M, Zhou JY, Avtandilashvili M, McComish SL, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Autopsy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Radiation Dosage, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium urine, Radiation Exposure analysis
- Abstract
Purpose: Radiation dose estimates in epidemiology typically rely on intake predictions based on urine bioassay measurements. The purpose of this article is to compare the conventional dosimetric estimates for radiation epidemiology with the estimates based on additional post-mortem tissue radiochemical analysis results., Methods: The comparison was performed on a unique group of 11 former Manhattan Project nuclear workers, who worked with plutonium in the 1940s, and voluntarily donated their bodies to the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries., Results: Post-mortem organ activities were predicted using different sets of urine data and compared to measured activities. Use of urinalysis data collected during the exposure periods overestimated the systemic (liver+skeleton) deposition of 239Pu by 155±134%, while the average bias from using post-exposure urinalyses was -4±50%. Committed effective doses estimated using early urine data differed from the best estimate by, on average, 196±193%; inclusion of follow-up urine measurements in analyses decreased the mean bias to 0.6±36.3%. Cumulative absorbed doses for the liver, red marrow, bone surface, and brain were calculated for the actual commitment period., Conclusion: On average, post-exposure urine bioassay results were in good agreement with post-mortem tissue analyses and were more reliable than results of urine bioassays collected during the exposure., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
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33. Inhalation of Soluble Plutonium: 53-year Follow-up of Manhattan Project Worker.
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Šefl M, Avtandilashvili M, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Americium, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
Abstract: This whole-body tissue donor to the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries was occupationally exposed to plutonium nitrate-dioxide mixture via chronic inhalation. This individual was involved in the Manhattan Project operations and later participated in medical follow-up studies. Soft tissues and bones collected at autopsy were analyzed for 238Pu, 239+240Pu, and 241Am. Fifty-three years post-intake, 700±2 Bq of 239+240Pu were still retained in the skeleton, 661±11 Bq in the liver, and 282±3 Bq in the respiratory tract. Bioassay measurements and organ activities at the time of death were used to estimate the intake and radiation doses using the TAURUS internal dosimetry software. For this individual, an ICRP Publication 130 Human Respiratory Tract Model with case-specific particle size of 0.3 μm, ICRP Publication 100 Human Alimentary Tract Model, and ICRP Publication 141 Plutonium Systemic Model adequately described long-term plutonium retention and excretion. The total cumulative 239+240Pu intake of 31,716 Bq was estimated, of which 24,853 Bq (78.4%) were contributed by inhalation of plutonium nitrate and 6,863 Bq (21.6%) of plutonium dioxide. The committed equivalent doses to the red bone marrow, bone surface, liver, lungs, and brain were 0.71 Sv, 6.5 Sv, 8.3 Sv, 3.8 Sv, and 0.068 Sv, respectively. The committed effective dose was 1.22 Sv., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Health Physics Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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34. Long-term Retention of Plutonium in the Respiratory Tracts of Two Acutely-exposed Workers: Estimation of Bound Fraction.
- Author
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Aerosols, Biological Assay, Humans, Occupational Exposure statistics & numerical data, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium analysis, Respiratory System chemistry
- Abstract
Abstract: Inhalation of plutonium is a significant contributor of occupational doses in plutonium production, nuclear fuel reprocessing, and cleanup operations. Accurate assessment of the residence time of plutonium in the lungs is important to properly characterize dose and, consequently, the risk from inhalation of plutonium aerosols. This paper discusses the long-term retention of plutonium in different parts of the respiratory tract of two workers who donated their bodies to the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries. The post-mortem tissue radiochemical analysis results, along with the urine bioassay data, were interpreted using Markov Chain Monte Carlo and the latest biokinetic models presented in the Occupational Intakes of Radionuclides series of ICRP publications. The materials inhaled by both workers were found to have solubility between that of plutonium nitrates and oxides. The long-term solubility was also confirmed by comparison of the activity concentration in the lungs and the thoracic lymph nodes. The data from the two individuals can be explained by assuming a bound fraction (fraction of plutonium deposited in the respiratory tract that becomes bound to lung tissue after dissolution) of 1% and 4%, respectively, without having to significantly alter the particle clearance parameters. Effects of different assumptions about the bound fraction on radiation doses to different target regions was also investigated. For inhalation of soluble materials, an assumption of fb of 1%, compared to the ICRP default of 0.2%, increases the dose to the most sensitive target region of the respiratory tract by 258% and that to the total lung by 116%. Some possible alternate methods of explaining higher-than-expected long-term retention of plutonium in the upper respiratory tract of these individuals-such as physical sequestration of material into the scar tissues and possible uptake by lungs-are also briefly discussed., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Health Physics Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Response to the Letter to the Editor, 'Comments on "Improved Modeling of Plutonium-DTPA Decorporation," (Radiat Res 2019; 191:201-10) by Gremy and Miccoli'.
- Author
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Dumit S, Breustedt B, Avtandilashvili M, McComish SL, Strom DJ, Tabatadze G, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Chelating Agents, Pentetic Acid, Plutonium
- Published
- 2019
36. Estimation of Total Skeletal Content of Plutonium and 241Am From Analysis of a Single Bone.
- Author
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Tolmachev SY, Avtandilashvili M, and Kathren RL
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Americium poisoning, Bone and Bones radiation effects, Case-Control Studies, Humans, Male, Occupational Diseases etiology, Occupational Diseases pathology, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Osteoporosis etiology, Osteoporosis pathology, Plutonium poisoning, Tissue Donors, Americium analysis, Bone and Bones metabolism, Occupational Diseases metabolism, Occupational Exposure analysis, Osteoporosis metabolism, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
The skeleton is one of the major retention sites for internally deposited actinides. Thus, an accurate estimation of the total skeleton content of these elements is important for biokinetic modeling and internal radiation dose assessment. Data from 18 whole-body donations to the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries with known plutonium intakes were used to develop a simple and reliable method for estimation of plutonium and Am activity in the total skeleton from single-bone analysis. A coefficient of deposition Kdep, defined as the ratio of actinide content in the patella to that in the skeleton, was calculated for Pu, Pu, and Am. No statistical difference was found in Kdep values among these radionuclides. Variability in Kdep values was investigated with relation to skeleton pathology (osteoporosis). The average Kdep of 0.0051 ± 0.0009 for the osteoporotic group was statistically different from Kdep of 0.0032 ± 0.0010 for nonosteoporotic individuals. The use of Kdep allows for rapid estimation of the total skeletal content of plutonium and Am with up to 35% uncertainty. To improve accuracy and precision of total skeleton activity estimates, regression analysis with power function was applied to the data. Strong correlation (r > 0.9) was found between Pu, Pu, and Am activities measured in the patella bone and total skeleton activity. The results of this study are specifically important for the optimization of bone sample collection for US Transuranium and Uranium Registries partial-body donations.
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
37. Evaluating Plutonium Intake and Radiation Dose Following Extensive Chelation Treatment.
- Author
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Dumit S, Avtandilashvili M, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Aged, Chelation Therapy, Humans, Male, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Injuries etiology, Tissue Donors, Wounds, Penetrating etiology, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Plutonium analysis, Plutonium poisoning, Radiation Injuries drug therapy, Wounds, Penetrating drug therapy
- Abstract
A voluntary partial-body donor (US Transuranium and Uranium Registries case 0785) was accidentally exposed to Pu via inhalation and wounds. This individual underwent medical treatment including wound excision and extensive chelation treatment with calcium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid and calcium diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid. Approximately 2.2 kBq of Pu was measured in the wound site 44 y after the accident. Major soft tissues and selected bones were collected at autopsy and radiochemically analyzed for Pu, Pu, and Am. Postmortem systemic retention of Pu, Pu, and Am was estimated to be 32.0 ± 1.4 Bq, 2,172 ± 70 Bq, and 394 ± 15 Bq, respectively. Approximately 3% of Pu whole-body activity was still retained in the lungs 51 y after the accident indicating exposure to insoluble plutonium material. To estimate the intake and calculate radiation dose, urine measurements not affected by chelation treatment, in vivo chest counts, and postmortem radiochemical analysis data were simultaneously fitted using Integrated Modules for Bioassay Analysis Professional Plus software. The currently recommended International Commission on Radiological Protection Publication 130 human respiratory tract model and National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements Report 156 wound model were used with default parameters. The intake, adjusted for Pu removed by chelation treatment, was estimated at approximately 79.5 kBq with 68% resulting from inhalation and 32% from the wound. Inhaled plutonium was predominantly insoluble type S material (74%) with insoluble plutonium fragments deposited in the wound. Only 1.3% reduction in radiation dose was achieved by chelation treatment. The committed effective dose was calculated to be 1.49 Sv. Using urine data available for this case, the effect of chelation therapy was evaluated. Urinary excretion enhancement factors were calculated as 83 ± 52 and 38 ± 17 for initial and delayed calcium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid treatments, respectively, and as 18 ± 5 for delayed calcium diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid. The enhancement factor decreases proportionally to an inverse cubic root of time after intake. For delayed calcium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid treatment, with five consecutive daily administrations, the enhancement factor increased from day 1 to 4, followed by approximately a 50% drop on day 5. The half-time of plutonium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid complex removal in urine was evaluated to be 1.4 d.
- Published
- 2019
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38. Modeling the Skeleton Weight of an Adult Caucasian Man.
- Author
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Avtandilashvili M and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radiation Dosage, Reference Values, Tissue Distribution, Uranium pharmacokinetics, Body Height radiation effects, Body Weight radiation effects, Models, Biological, Radiation Monitoring methods, Tissue Donors, Uranium analysis
- Abstract
The reference value for the skeleton weight of an adult male (10.5 kg) recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection in Publication 70 is based on weights of dissected skeletons from 44 individuals, including two US Transuranium and Uranium Registries whole-body donors. The International Commission on Radiological Protection analysis of anatomical data from 31 individuals with known values of body height demonstrated significant correlation between skeleton weight and body height. The corresponding regression equation, Wskel (kg) = -10.7 + 0.119 × H (cm), published in International Commission on Radiological Protection Publication 70 is typically used to estimate the skeleton weight from body height. Currently, the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries holds data on individual bone weights from a total of 40 male whole-body donors, which has provided a unique opportunity to update the International Commission on Radiological Protection skeleton weight vs. body height equation. The original International Commission on Radiological Protection Publication 70 and the new US Transuranium and Uranium Registries data were combined in a set of 69 data points representing a group of 33- to 95-y-old individuals with body heights and skeleton weights ranging from 155 to 188 cm and 6.5 to 13.4 kg, respectively. Data were fitted with a linear least-squares regression. A significant correlation between the two parameters was observed (r = 0.28), and an updated skeleton weight vs. body height equation was derived: Wskel (kg) = -6.5 + 0.093 × H (cm). In addition, a correlation of skeleton weight with multiple variables including body height, body weight, and age was evaluated using multiple regression analysis, and a corresponding fit equation was derived: Wskel (kg) = -0.25 + 0.046 × H (cm) + 0.036 × Wbody (kg) - 0.012 × A (y). These equations will be used to estimate skeleton weights and, ultimately, total skeletal actinide activities for biokinetic modeling of US Transuranium and Uranium Registries partial-body donation cases.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Ustur Case 0846: Modeling Americium Biokinetics after Intensive Decorporation Therapy.
- Author
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Breustedt B, Avtandilashvili M, McComish SL, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Chelation Therapy, Humans, Kinetics, Male, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Injuries etiology, Radiation Protection, Radiometry, Tissue Donors, Americium analysis, Americium poisoning, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Decontamination methods, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Radiation Injuries drug therapy
- Abstract
Decorporation therapy with salts of diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid binds actinides, thereby limiting uptake to organs and enhancing the rate at which actinides are excreted in urine. International Commission on Radiological Protection reference biokinetic models cannot be used to fit this enhanced exertion simultaneously with the baseline actinide excretion rate that is observed prior to the start of therapy and/or after the effects of therapy have ceased. In this study, the Coordinated Network on Radiation Dosimetry approach, which was initially developed for modeling decorporation of plutonium, was applied to model decorporation of americium using data from a former radiation worker who agreed to donate his body to the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries for research. This individual was exposed to airborne Am, resulting in a total-body activity of 66.6 kBq. He was treated with calcium-diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid for 7 y. The time and duration of intakes are unknown as no incident reports are available. Modeling of different assumptions showed that an acute intake of 5-μm activity median aerodynamic diameter type M aerosols provides the most reasonable description of the available pretherapeutic data; however, the observed Am activity in the lungs at the time of death was higher than the one predicted for type M material. The Coordinated Network on Radiation Dosimetry approach for decorporation modeling was used to model the in vivo chelation process directly. It was found that the Coordinated Network on Radiation Dosimetry approach, which only considered chelation in blood and extracellular fluids, underestimated the urinary excretion of Am during diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid treatment; therefore, the approach was extended to include chelation in the liver. Both urinary excretion and whole-body retention could be described when it was assumed that 25% of chelation occurred in the liver, 75% occurred in the blood and ST0 compartment, and the chelation rate constant was 1 × 10 pmol d. It was observed that enhancement of urinary excretion of Am after injection of diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid exponentially decreased to the baseline level with an average half-time of 2.2 ± 0.7 d.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Validation of a system of models for plutonium decorporation therapy.
- Author
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Dumit S, Avtandilashvili M, McComish SL, Strom DJ, Tabatadze G, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics, Bone and Bones metabolism, Gastrointestinal Tract metabolism, Humans, Liver metabolism, Occupational Exposure, Plutonium pharmacokinetics, Respiratory System metabolism, Air Pollutants, Radioactive urine, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Edetic Acid therapeutic use, Inhalation Exposure, Models, Biological, Pentetic Acid therapeutic use, Plutonium urine, Radiation Injuries prevention & control
- Abstract
A recently proposed system of models for plutonium decorporation (SPD) was developed using data from an individual occupationally exposed to plutonium via a wound [from United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR) Case 0212]. The present study evaluated the SPD using chelation treatment data, urine measurements, and post-mortem plutonium activities in the skeleton and liver from USTUR Case 0269. This individual was occupationally exposed to moderately soluble plutonium via inhalation and extensively treated with chelating agents. The SPD was linked to the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) Publication 66 Human Respiratory Tract Model (HRTM) and the ICRP Publication 30 Gastrointestinal Tract model to evaluate the goodness-of-fit to the urinary excretion data and the predictions of post-mortem plutonium retention in the skeleton and liver. The goodness-of-fit was also evaluated when the SPD was linked to the ICRP Publication 130 HRTM and the ICRP Publication 100 Human Alimentary Tract Model. The present study showed that the proposed SPD was useful for fitting the entire, chelation-affected and non-affected, urine bioassay data, and for predicting the post-mortem plutonium retention in the skeleton and liver at time of death, 38.5 years after the accident. The results of this work are consistent with the conclusion that Ca-EDTA is less effective than Ca-DTPA for enhancing urinary excretion of plutonium.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Improved Modeling of Plutonium-DTPA Decorporation.
- Author
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Dumit S, Avtandilashvili M, Strom DJ, McComish SL, Tabatadze G, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Biological Assay, Chelating Agents administration & dosage, Chelating Agents pharmacokinetics, Humans, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure, Pentetic Acid administration & dosage, Pentetic Acid pharmacokinetics, Plutonium pharmacokinetics, Plutonium urine, Postmortem Changes, Radiation Dosage, Tissue Distribution, Chelating Agents chemistry, Models, Chemical, Pentetic Acid chemistry, Plutonium chemistry
- Abstract
Individuals with significant intakes of plutonium (Pu) are typically treated with chelating agents, such as the trisodium salt form of calcium diethylenetriaminepentaacetate (CaNa
3 -DTPA, referred to hereafter as Ca-DTPA). Currently, there is no recommended approach for simultaneously modeling plutonium biokinetics during and after chelation therapy. In this study, an improved modeling system for plutonium decorporation was developed. The system comprises three individual model structures describing, separately, the distinct biokinetic behaviors of systemic plutonium, intravenously injected Ca-DTPA and in vivo-formed Pu-DTPA chelate. The system was linked to ICRP Publication 100, "Human Alimentary Tract Model for Radiological Protection" and NCRP Report 156, Development of a Biokinetic Model for Radionuclide-Contaminated Wounds and Procedures for Their Assessment, Dosimetry and Treatment." Urine bioassay and chelation treatment data from an occupationally-exposed individual were used for model development. Chelation was assumed to occur in the blood, soft tissues, liver and skeleton. The coordinated network for radiation dosimetry approach to decorporation modeling was applied using a chelation constant describing the secondorder, time-dependent kinetics of the in vivo chelation reaction. When using the proposed system of models for plutonium decorporation, a significant improvement of the goodness-of-fit to the urinary excretion data was observed and more accurate predictions of postmortem plutonium retention in the skeleton, liver and wound site were achieved., (© 2019 by Radiation Research Society.)- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. USTUR WHOLE-BODY CASE 0212: 17-YEAR FOLLOW-UP OF PLUTONIUM CONTAMINATED WOUND.
- Author
-
Avtandilashvili M, Dumit S, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Combined Modality Therapy, Fatal Outcome, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pentetic Acid therapeutic use, Whole-Body Counting, Finger Injuries therapy, Nitrates analysis, Nitrates poisoning, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis, Plutonium poisoning, Radiation Injuries therapy
- Abstract
The National Council of Radiation Protection and Measurements' (NCRP) wound model was applied to the bioassay data from a United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries' whole-body tissue donor, Case 0212. This individual was exposed to plutonium nitrate as a result of an occupational wound injury and he underwent extensive chelation treatment with Ca-DTPA. All major soft tissues and bones were collected post-mortem and radiochemically analyzed for 238Pu, 239,240Pu and 241Am. The 239,240Pu activity in the total body was estimated to be 232.0 Bq, with 80.3 Bq retained in the liver, 115.1 Bq in the skeleton and 14.3 Bq in the wound. The maximum likelihood method was used to simultaneously fit the 'post-treatment' urinary excretion and post-mortem liver and skeleton retention data. It was demonstrated that the deposited material was predominantly a strongly retained soluble compound (nitrate) with a 22% fraction of plutonium particles. The residual intake, the amount of plutonium deposited in the wound that was not removed from the system by Ca-DTPA, was estimated to be 288 Bq. The resulting committed effective dose was 134 mSv. Accounting for plutonium eliminated in the urine during chelation therapy, the actual 'untreated' intake was 1204 Bq, and the projected committed effective dose was 567 mSv. Hence, DTPA treatment reduced the dose by a factor of 4., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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43. US Transuranium and Uranium Registries case study on accidental exposure to uranium hexafluoride.
- Author
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Avtandilashvili M, Puncher M, McComish SL, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Biological Assay methods, Computer Simulation, Humans, Male, Nuclear Power Plants, Radiation Dosage, Radioactive Fallout analysis, Registries, Fluorides analysis, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure analysis, Radioactive Hazard Release, Uranium Compounds analysis, Whole-Body Counting methods
- Abstract
The United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries' (USTUR) whole-body donor (Case 1031) was exposed to an acute inhalation of uranium hexafluoride (UF6) produced from an explosion at a uranium processing plant 65 years prior to his death. The USTUR measurements of tissue samples collected at the autopsy indicated long-term retention of inhaled slightly enriched uranium material (0.85% (235)U) in the deep lungs and thoracic lymph nodes. In the present study, the authors combined the tissue measurement results with historical bioassay data, and analysed them with International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) respiratory tract models and the ICRP Publication 69 systemic model for uranium using maximum likelihood and Bayesian statistical methods. The purpose of the analysis was to estimate intakes and model parameter values that best describe the data, and evaluate their effect on dose assessment. The maximum likelihood analysis, which used the ICRP Publication 66 human respiratory tract model, resulted in a point estimate of 79 mg of uranium for the occupational intake composed of 86% soluble, type F material and 14% insoluble, type S material. For the Bayesian approach, the authors applied the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method, but this time used the revised human respiratory tract model, which is currently being used by ICRP to calculate new dose coefficients for workers. The Bayesian analysis estimated that the mean uranium intake was 160 mg, and calculated the case-specific lung dissolution parameters with their associated uncertainties. The parameters were consistent with the inhaled uranium material being predominantly soluble with a small but significant insoluble component. The 95% posterior range of the rapid dissolution fraction (the fraction of deposited material that is absorbed to blood rapidly) was 0.12 to 0.91 with a median of 0.37. The remaining fraction was absorbed slowly, with a 95% range of 0.000 22 d(-1) to 0.000 36 d(-1) and a median of 0.000 31 d(-1). The effective dose per unit intake calculated using the dissolution parameters derived from the maximum likelihood and the Bayesian analyses was higher than the current ICRP dose coefficient for type F uranium by a factor of 2 or 7, respectively; the higher value of the latter was due to use of the revised respiratory tract model. The dissolution parameter values obtained here may be more appropriate to use for radiation protection purposes when individuals are exposed to a UF6 mixture that contains an insoluble uranium component.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Application of Bayesian inference to the bioassay data from long-term follow-up of two refractory PuO2 inhalation cases.
- Author
-
Avtandilashvili M, Brey R, and Birchall A
- Subjects
- Autopsy, Biological Assay, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Plutonium metabolism, Time Factors, Bayes Theorem, Inhalation, Lung Diseases metabolism, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure, Plutonium administration & dosage, Respiratory System metabolism
- Abstract
The dominant contribution to the uncertainty in internal dose assessment can often be explained by the uncertainty in the biokinetic model structure and parameters. The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) is currently updating its biokinetic models, including the Human Respiratory Tract Model (HRTM). Gregoratto et al. (2010) proposed a physiologically-based particle transport model that simplifies significantly the representation of particle clearance from the alveolar interstitial region. Bayesian inference using the Weighted Likelihood Monte-Carlo Sampling (WeLMoS) method is applied to the bioassay and autopsy data from the U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries' (USTUR) tissue donors 0202 and 0407 exposed to "high fired," refractory PuO2 aerosols in order to examine the applicability of the revised model and to estimate the uncertainties in model parameters and the lung doses as expressed by the posterior probability distributions. It is demonstrated that, with appropriate adjustments, the Gregoratto et al. particle transport model can describe situations involving exposure to highly insoluble particles. Significant differences are observed in particle clearance pattern characteristics to these two individuals' respiratory systems. The respiratory tract of registrant 0202 was most likely compromised by his prior occupational exposure to coal dust, smoking habit, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, while donor 0407 was a non-smoker and had no prior history of lung disorder. However, the central values of the particle transport parameter posterior distributions for both cases are found to be still within the 68% probability range for the inter-subject variability derived by Gregoratto et al. PuO2 particles produced by the plutonium fire were extremely insoluble, with about 99% absorbed into blood at a rate of approximately 4.8 × 10 d (Case 0202) and 5.1 × 10 d (Case 0202). When considering this type of plutonium material, doses to other body organs are small in comparison to those to tissues of the respiratory tract. More than 95% of the total committed weighted equivalent dose is contributed by the lungs.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Maximum likelihood analysis of bioassay data from long-term follow-up of two refractory PuO2 inhalation cases.
- Author
-
Avtandilashvili M, Brey R, and James AC
- Subjects
- Absorption, Biological Transport, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Likelihood Functions, Lung metabolism, Lung radiation effects, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium blood, Plutonium chemistry, Solubility, Time Factors, Tissue Donors statistics & numerical data, Biological Assay, Inhalation, Plutonium metabolism, Radioactive Hazard Release
- Abstract
The U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries' tissue donors 0202 and 0407 are the two most highly exposed of the 18 registrants who were involved in the 1965 plutonium fire accident at a defense nuclear facility. Material released during the fire was well characterized as "high fired" refractory plutonium dioxide with 0.32-μm mass median diameter. The extensive bioassay data from long-term follow-up of these two cases were used to evaluate the applicability of the Human Respiratory Tract Model presented by International Commission on Radiological Protection in Publication 66 and its revision proposed by Gregoratto et al. in order to account for the observed long-term retention of insoluble material in the lungs. The maximum likelihood method was used to calculate the point estimates of intake and tissue doses and to examine the effect of different lung clearance, blood absorption, and systemic models on the goodness-of-fit and estimated dose values. With appropriate adjustments, Gregoratto et al. particle transport model coupled with the customized blood absorption parameters yielded a credible fit to the bioassay data for both cases and predicted the Case 0202 liver and skeletal activities measured postmortem. PuO2 particles produced by the plutonium fire are extremely insoluble. About 1% of this material is absorbed from the respiratory tract relatively rapidly, at a rate of about 1 to 2 d (half-time about 8 to 16 h). The remainder (99%) is absorbed extremely slowly, at a rate of about 5 × 10(-6) d (half-time about 400 y). When considering this situation, it appears that doses to other body organs are negligible in comparison to those to tissues of the respiratory tract. About 96% of the total committed weighted dose equivalent is contributed by the lungs. Doses absorbed by these workers' lungs were high: 3.2 Gy to AI and 6.5 Gy to LNTH for Case 0202 (18 y post-intake) and 3.2 Gy to AI and 55.5 Gy to LNTH for Case 0407 (43 y post-intake). This evaluation supports the Gregoratto et al. proposed revision to the ICRP 66 model when considering situations of extremely insoluble particles.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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