Filipy R E, Kathren R L, McInroy J F, Short R A
U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries, Washington State University, Tri-Cities, Richland 99352.
Health Phys. 1994 Nov;67(5):477-85. doi: 10.1097/00004032-199411000-00003.
Human tissues, obtained at autopsy from 82 volunteer donors with a history of occupational exposure, were analyzed for 238Pu, 239 + 240Pu, and 241Am by chemical separation and subsequent alpha spectrometry. Concentrations of these actinide nuclides in soft tissues (testes, thyroid gland, spleen, kidneys, heart, and skeletal muscle) were compared to those of the livers in the same subjects. Tissue:liver concentration ratios were essentially constant over a wide range of liver concentrations. The spleen had consistently high actinide concentrations relative to liver; however, the heart had the greatest concentration ratio for 241Am. Testes had relatively high concentration ratios of the plutonium nuclides but low concentrations of 241Am. Skeletal muscle had low concentrations of plutonium relative to liver but high concentrations of 241Am. In the tissues studied, concentration ratios of 241Am were greater than those of the plutonium nuclides, most likely a result of more rapid excretion of that nuclide than the plutonium nuclides by the liver.