| Literature DB >> 28188481 |
Valeriy Stepanenko1, Tolebay Rakhypbekov2, Keiko Otani3, Satoru Endo3, Kenichi Satoh3, Noriyuki Kawano3, Kazuko Shichijo4, Masahiro Nakashima4, Toshihiro Takatsuji4, Aya Sakaguchi5, Hiroaki Kato5, Yuichi Onda5, Nariaki Fujimoto3, Shin Toyoda6, Hitoshi Sato7, Altay Dyussupov2, Nailya Chaizhunusova2, Nurlan Sayakenov2, Darkhan Uzbekov2, Aisulu Saimova2, Dariya Shabdarbaeva2, Mazhin Skakov8, Alexandr Vurim8, Vyacheslav Gnyrya8, Almas Azimkhanov8, Alexander Kolbayenkov8, Kasym Zhumadilov9, Yankar Kairikhanova2, Andrey Kaprin10, Vsevolod Galkin10, Sergey Ivanov10, Timofey Kolyzhenkov10, Aleksey Petukhov10, Elena Yaskova10, Irina Belukha10, Artem Khailov10, Valeriy Skvortsov10, Alexander Ivannikov10, Umukusum Akhmedova10, Viktoria Bogacheva10, Masaharu Hoshi3.
Abstract
There were two sources of ionizing irradiation after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki: (1) initial gamma-neutron irradiation at the moment of detonation and (2) residual radioactivity. Residual radioactivity consisted of two components: radioactive fallout containing fission products, including radioactive fissile materials from nuclear device, and neutron-activated radioisotopes from materials on the ground. The dosimetry systems DS86 and DS02 were mainly devoted to the assessment of initial radiation exposure to neutrons and gamma rays, while only brief considerations were given for the estimation of doses caused by residual radiation exposure. Currently, estimation of internal exposure of atomic bomb survivors due to dispersed radioactivity and neutron-activated radioisotopes from materials on the ground is a matter of some interest, in Japan. The main neutron-activated radionuclides in soil dust were 24Na, 28Al, 31Si, 32P, 38Cl, 42K, 45Ca, 46Sc, 56Mn, 59Fe, 60Co, and 134Cs. The radionuclide 56Mn (T 1/2 = 2.58 h) is known as one of the dominant beta- and gamma emitters during the first few hours after neutron irradiation of soil and other materials on ground, dispersed in the form of dust after a nuclear explosion in the atmosphere. To investigate the peculiarities of biological effects of internal exposure to 56Mn in comparison with external gamma irradiation, a dedicated experiment with Wistar rats exposed to neutron-activated 56Mn dioxide powder was performed recently by Shichijo and coworkers. The dosimetry required for this experiment is described here. Assessment of internal radiation doses was performed on the basis of measured 56Mn activity in the organs and tissues of the rats and of absorbed fractions of internal exposure to photons and electrons calculated with the MCNP-4C Monte Carlo using a mathematical rat phantom. The first results of this international multicenter study show that the internal irradiation due to incorporated 56Mn powder is highly inhomogeneous, and that the most irradiated organs of the experimental animals are: large intestine, small intestine, stomach, and lungs. Accumulated absorbed organ doses were 1.65, 1.33, 0.24, 0.10 Gy for large intestine, small intestine, stomach, and lungs, respectively. Other organs were irradiated at lower dose levels. These results will be useful for interpretation of the biological effects of internal exposure of experimental rats to powdered 56Mn as observed by Shichijo and coworkers.Entities:
Keywords: 56Mn; Experimental rats; Internal dosimetry; Monte Carlo simulation; Neutron activation; Radioactive dust
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28188481 DOI: 10.1007/s00411-016-0678-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Environ Biophys ISSN: 0301-634X Impact factor: 1.925