Human metabolism of orally administered radioactive cobalt chloride

Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
H HolsteinC L Rääf

Abstract

This study investigated the human gastrointestinal uptake (f1) and subsequent whole-body retention of orally administered inorganic radioactive cobalt. Of eight adult volunteers aged between 24 and 68 years, seven were given solutions of (57)Co (T1/2 = 272 d) containing a stable cobalt carrier, and six were given carrier-free (58)Co (T1/2 = 71 d). The administered activities ranged between 25 and 103 kBq. The observed mean f1, based on 6 days accumulated urinary excretion sampling and whole-body counting, was 0.028 ± 0.0048 for carrier-free (58)Co, and 0.016 ± 0.0021 for carrier-associated (57)Co. These values were in reasonable agreement with values reported from previous studies involving a single intake of inorganic cobalt. The time pattern of the total retention (including residual cobalt in the GI tract) included a short-term component with a biological half-time of 0.71 ± 0.03 d (average ± 1 standard error of the mean for the two nuclides), an intermediate component with a mean half-time of 32 ± 8.5 d, and a long-term component (observed in two volunteers) with half-times ranging from 80 to 720 d for the two isotopes. From the present data we conclude that for the short-lived (57)Co and (58)Co, more than 95% of the intern...Continue Reading

References

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Sep 11, 2002·Isotopes in Environmental and Health Studies·E WernerN Felgenhauer
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Jun 27, 2012·The Science of the Total Environment·Lars Ole SimonsenPoul Bennekou

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Citations

Aug 31, 2019·Journal of Radiological Protection : Official Journal of the Society for Radiological Protection·Christopher L RääfKristina Eriksson Stenström

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