(1)Battelle, Pacific Northwest Laboratory,
Richland, Washington
(2)any element of the actinide series-the
series of mostly synthetic radioactive elements whose atomic numbers range from
89 (actinium) through 103 (lawrencium)
(3)a chemical agent that removes heavy metals
from the bloodstream and soft tissues
(4)Rochester, New York
(5)a technique whereby thin tissues sections
are placed on photographic film to record tracks if radioactive particles are
emitted
(6)a malignant tumor composed of epithelial
tissue-the tissue layer covering body surfaces or lining the internal surfaces
of body cavities, tubes, and hollow organs
(7)the gum(s)
(8)the bone or bony composite that makes up
the lower jaw
(9)derived from or made up of bone-forming
tissue
(10)any of various malignant tumors composed
of neoplastic cells resembling embryonic connective tissue
(11)study of the uptake, retention,
translocation, and excretion of elements by the living organism
(12)inside the body
(13)having spongy or porous structure, as
found at the ends of long bones; cancellate
(14)joined or packed together; dense
(15)serum albumin the principal protein of
blood plasma)and serum globulin the globulin in blood serum containing most of
the blood's antibodies)
(16)of the glomerulus, any compact cluster
of nerves or capillaries, especially in the kidney, that acts as a filter of the
blood
(17)a plasma glycoprotein that transports
dietary iron to the liver, spleen, and bone marrow
(18)a protein of the liver, spleen, and bone
marrow that stores iron for use in metabolism
(19)conveying bile, a bitter, alkaline,
yellow or greenish liquid, secreted by the liver, that aids in intestinal
absorption and digestion, especially of fatty substances
(20)The AEC Division of Biology and
Medicine, in response to the urgent need for radiation biomedical information,
initiated Project Sunshine. The Project began an evaluation of the hazards
associated with nuclear war and grew into a worldwide investigation of
radioactive fallout levels in the environment and in human beings.
(21)"a high-level security clearance
issued by AEC(and later DOE), comparable to a Top Secret clearance from the U.S.
Department of Defense
(22)International Commission on Radiological
Protection
(23)diagnostic and therapeutic medical
techniques using radionuclides or radioisotopes
(24)an endocrine gland located at the base
of the neck and secreting two hormones that regulate the rates of metabolism,
growth, and development
(25)a part that forms a known fraction of a
whole and constitutes a sample for chemical analysis
(26)analysis of the amount of material
present by the number of counts comprising the energy spectrum or peak
(27)analysis of a sample according to its
characteristic emission of radiation, especially of visible light, by a
substance during exposure to x rays
(28)a component of cell membranes abundant
in nerve tissue
(29)Committee on Interagency Radiation
Research and Policy Coordination
(30)Office of Health and Environmental
Research, DOE
(31)U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(32)U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(33)Energy Research and Development Agency,
a predecessor agency to the Department of Energy
(34)exposure standards are so low-that is,
so conservative and restrictive(protective)
(35)radioactive nuclides (atomic species in
which the atoms all have the same atomic number and mass number)
(36)the U.S. Government's ultrasecret
project to develop an atomic bomb
(37)the branch of biology dealing with the
functions and activities of living organisms and their parts
(38)the science or the study of the origin,
nature, and course of diseases
(39)the branch of pharmacology dealing with
the effects, antidotes, detection, etc. of poisons
(40)an accelerator in which particles move
in spiral paths in a constant magnetic field
(41)In 1988, Congress changed the name and
mission of the National Bureau of Standards to the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST).
(42)positron emission tomography-the process
of producing a PET scan, a medical image obtained by examination with a PET
scanner, a device that produces computerized three-dimensional images of
biochemical activity in the brain or other organ through use of radioactive
tracers that emit positrons and twin 0.511 MeV gamma rays
(43)a heavy, rare element of the halogen
family
(44)As Fisher points out later, astatine-211
has a physical half-life of just 7 hours.
(45)a chemical, 6-propyl-2-thiouracil, used
as a thyroid inhibitor
(46)having had the ovaries surgically
removed
(47)having undergone the surgical removal of
the adrenal glands
(48)having undergone the surgical removal of
the pituitary gland
(49)the small gland attached to the base of
the brain, constituting the master endocrine gland affecting all hormonal
functions of the body
(50)abnormal multiplication of cells
(51)radioactive substances that emit helium
nuclei during radioactive decay and can cause tissue damage if ingested or
inhaled
(52)an aromatic, polycyclic hydrocarbon,
C22H14, capable, when injected into the body, of producing epithelial tumors
(53)promoting or producing estrus, a
recurring period of maximum sexual receptivity in most female mammals other than
humans; "heat"
(54)a series of physiological changes in
sexual and other organs in female mammals, extending from one estrus (period of
heat)to the next
(55)malignant tumors composed of epithelial
tissue (a tissue layer covering body surfaces or lining the internal surfaces of
body cavities, tubes, and hollow organs)
(56)benign tumors originating in a secretory
gland
(57)an immature egg cell of the animal
ovary: in humans, one oocyte matures during the menstrual cycle while several
others partially mature and disintegrate.
(58)the branch of pathology dealing with the
structure of normal or diseased tissue
(59)pertaining to the adrenal glands-a pair
of ductless glands, located above the kidneys, that produces steroidal hormones,
epinephrine, and norepinephrine
(60)antibodies produced by a laboratory cell
clone to achieve greater abundance and uniformity than provided by a natural
antibody
(61)Instability of the halogen (directly
attached to a protein) due to biological process in the body, causing the
halogen to dissociate completely
(62)MIRD-Medical Internal Radiation Dose
Committee of The Society of Nuclear Medicine
(63)the surgical removal of organs, abnormal
growths, or harmful substances from the body
(64)relating to the kidneys or the
surrounding regions
(65)the wasting away of an organ or other
body part, typically by defective nutrition or nerve damage
(66)convoluted tubule-the portion of a
kidney nephron that concentrates urine and maintains salt and water balance
(67)compact clusters of capillaries in the
nephron of the kidney that filter blood
(68)inflammation of a mucous membrane
(69)diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid
(70)ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid
(71)a chelating agent complexes metals by
chemical bonding, allowing excretion of the metal plus chelate from the body
(72)any element of a series of rare-earth
elements of atomic numbers 57 through 71
(73)firm, elastic, whitish types of
connective tissue;
also: structures composed of cartilage
(74)pertaining to the spinal cord or bone
marrow
(75)polycythemia vera, a disease
characterized by overproduction of red blood cells
(76)a joint effort of the International
Commission on Radiological Protection and the National Council on Radiation
Protection and Measurements
(77)an instrument for cutting very thin
sections of tissue for microscopic examination
(78)analysis of radionuclides in the urine
or feces
(79)a small, flat dish or plate used to
support a sample for determination of radioactivity; the sample usually is
evaporated on the planchette.
(80)too weak in energy to penetrate the lung
for measurement by external (thoracic) detectors
(81)For the transcript of the interview with
Richmond, see DOE/EH-0477, Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early
Years; Oral History of Dr. Chester R Richmond, Ph.D. (scheduled to be
published later in 1995).
(82)For the transcript of the interview with
Totter, see DOE/EH-0481, Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early
Years; Oral History of Dr. John R. Totter, Ph.D. (scheduled to be published
later in 1995).
(83)a radioactive, metallic chemical
element(Pa) having an atomic weight of 91
(84)a human injected with plutonium-238 and
-239, one of the original eighteen plutonium injectees
(85)Interviewed August 9 and 17, 1994. For
the transcript of the interview with Miller, see DOE/EH-0474,Human Radiation
Studies: Remembering the Early Years; Oral History of Radiologist Earl R.
Miller, M.D. (July 1995).
(86)time zero; at the start
(87)two of the three plutonium injectees at
the University of Chicago's Billings Hospital
(88)In 1967 the AEC contracted with the
Hanford Environmental Health Foundation (HEHF) in Richland, Washington for a
National Plutonium Registry. In 1970, the name was changed to U.S. Transuranium
Registry (USTR). USTR's function was to study postmortem tissues from exposed
workers to determine the pattern of distribution, concentration, and retention
of transuranic elements. The USTR currently is operated by Washington State
University.
(89)For the transcript of the interview with
Rowland, see DOE/EH-0461, Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early
Years; Oral History of Dr. Robert E. Rowland, Ph.D. (June 1995).
(90)plural of metastasis, the spread
of disease-producing organisms or of malignant or cancerous cells to other parts
of the body by way of the blood or lymphatic vessels or membranous surfaces; or,
the condition so produced
(91)pertaining to an endocrine gland, a
gland such as the thyroid, adrenal, or pituitary gland that secretes hormones
into the blood or lymph
(92)For the transcript of the interview with
Friedell, see DOE/EH-0466, Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early
Years; Oral History of Dr. Hymer L. Friedell, Ph.D. (scheduled to be
published later in 1995).
(93)University of California, San Francisco
(94) Bay Area Rapid Transit, San Francisco's
rapid-rail transit system
(95)an AEC uranium processing facility in
Ohio at which former workers filed a class-action suit, claiming they had not
been informed of the dangers of working with uranium; for a detailed discussion
of the Fernald suit, see DOE/EH-0456,
Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early Years; Oral History of Merril
Eisenbud (May 1995).
(96)For the transcript of the interview with
Moss, see DOE/EH-0459, Human Radiation Studies: Remembering the Early Years;
Oral History of William D. Moss (June 1995).
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