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Title: Fracture occurrence from radionuclides in the skeleton. Author: Lloyd RD, Taylor GN, Miller SC. Journal: Health Phys; 2000 Jun; 78(6):687-92. PubMed ID: 10832929. Abstract: Because skeletal fractures were an important finding among persons contaminated with 226Ra, experience with fractures among dogs in our colony was summarized to determine the projected significance for persons contaminated with bone-seeking radionuclides. Comparison by Fisher's Exact Test of lifetime fracture occurrence in the skeletons of beagles injected as young adults suggested that for animals given 226Ra, 228Ra, 228Th, or 239Pu citrate, there was probably an excess over controls in fractures of the ribs, leg bones, spinous processes, and pelvis (os coxae) plus the mandible for dogs given 226Ra and the scapulae for dogs given 228Ra or 228Th. Regression analysis indicated that significantly elevated fracture occurrence was especially notable at the higher radiation doses, at about 50 Gy average skeletal dose for 239Pu, 140 Gy for 226Ra, about 40 Gy for 228Ra, and more than 15 Gy for 228Th. The average number of fractures per dog was significantly elevated over that noted in controls for the highest radiation doses of 239Pu and 226Ra and for the higher doses of 228Ra and 228Th. For those dogs given 90Sr citrate, there was virtually no important difference from control beagles not given radionuclides, even at group mean cumulative skeletal radiation doses up to 101 Gy. Because of a large proportion of dogs with fractures that died with bone malignancy (even at dosage levels lower than those exhibiting an excess average number of fractures per dog), we conclude that fracture would not be an important endpoint at lower levels of plutonium contamination in humans such as would be expected to occur from occupational or environmental exposure.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]