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1 March 2009 The Effects of Smoking and Lung Health on the Organ Retention of Different Plutonium Compounds in the Mayak PA Workers
K. G. Suslova, A. B. Sokolova, M. P. Krahenbuhl, S. C. Miller
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Abstract

Suslova, K. G., Sokolova, A. B., Krahenbuhl, M. P. and Miller, S. C. The Effects of Smoking and Lung Health on the Organ Retention of Different Plutonium Compounds in the Mayak PA Workers. Radiat. Res. 171, 302–309 (2009).

The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of smoking and lung health on the pulmonary and extrapulmonary retention after inhalation of different chemical forms of plutonium with different solubilities in workers from the Mayak Production Association (Ozersk, Russia). Samples of lung, pulmonary lymph nodes, liver and skeleton were obtained from 800 workers who died between 1962–2000. The chemical form of plutonium aerosols, smoking history and presence of lung disease were determined. In workers with normal lung status, all plutonium chemical classes were about equally distributed between the lung parenchyma and pulmonary lymph nodes. The more insoluble chemical forms of plutonium had a greater retention in pulmonary than systemic tissues regardless of smoking history or lung health status. A history of smoking did, however, result in a significantly greater retention of less soluble chemical forms of plutonium in pulmonary tissues of workers with no lung disease. In workers with lung disease, smoking did not significantly influence the terminal organ retention of the different chemical forms of plutonium. These initial data can be used to modify dosimetry and biokinetics models used for estimating radiation risks from plutonium in humans.

K. G. Suslova, A. B. Sokolova, M. P. Krahenbuhl, and S. C. Miller "The Effects of Smoking and Lung Health on the Organ Retention of Different Plutonium Compounds in the Mayak PA Workers," Radiation Research 171(3), 302-309, (1 March 2009). https://doi.org/10.1667/0033-7587-171.3.302
Received: 11 September 2008; Accepted: 1 November 2008; Published: 1 March 2009
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