Parrish, Randall R; Arneson, J; Brewer, T; Chenery, Simon; Lloyd, Nicholas; Carpenter, D. 2007 Depleted uranium contamination by inhalation exposure and its detection after >25 years: Implications for human health assessment. Science of the Total Environment, 390. 58-68. 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2007.09.044
Abstract
Inhaled depleted uranium (DU) aerosols are recognised as a distinct human health hazard
and DU has been suggested to be responsible in part for illness in both military and civilian
populations that may have been exposed. This study aimed to develop and use a testing
procedure capable of detecting an individual's historic milligram-quantity aerosol exposure
to DU up to 20 years after the event. This method was applied to individuals associated with
or living proximal to a DU munitions plant in Colonie New York that were likely to have had
a significant DU aerosol inhalation exposure, in order to improve DU-exposure screening
reliability and gain insight into the residence time of DU in humans. We show using
sensitive mass spectrometric techniques that when exposure to aerosol has been
unambiguous and in sufficient quantity, urinary excretion of DU can be detected more
than 20 years after primary DU inhalation contamination ceased, even when DU constitutes
only ∼1% of the total excreted uranium. It seems reasonable to conclude that a chronically
DU-exposed population exists within the contamination ‘footprint’ of the munitions plant
in Colonie, New York. The method allows even a modest DU exposure to be identified where
other less sensitive methods would have failed entirely. This should allow better
assessment of historical exposure incidence than currently exists.
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