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Current status of bioassay procedures to detect and quantify previous exposures to radioactive materials
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1991
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EngineeringRadioactive ContaminationRadiation ExposureBioassay MethodsUrine Bioassay ProceduresBioassay ProceduresEnvironmental ChemistryIn-vitro Bioassay SamplesToxicologyAnalytical ChemistryPrevious ExposuresRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCurrent StatusRadiologyEcotoxicologyDosimetryMass SpectrometryForensic ToxicologyRadiation DoseRadioanalytical ChemistryEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
This report was prepared by a working group established by the Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) for the purpose of assessing the current capabilities of bioassay methods that can be used to determine the occurrence and magnitude of a previous internal deposition of one or more radionuclides. The first five sections discuss general features of the use of in-vitro bioassay samples to achieve this purpose. The remainder of the report is focused on the possible use of urine bioassay procedures to detect and quantify internal depositions of radionuclides that may have occurred in United States occupation troops in Hiroshima or Nagasaki, Japan, prior to 1 July 1946, or to personnel who participated in atmospheric nuclear weapons tests conducted between 1945 and 1962