Limits of fetal thyroid risk from radioiodine exposure
An incident in which a young women became pregnant soon after being treated with 444 MBq 131 I for Graves disease prompted us to search local records for the occurrence of thyroid abnormalities among people exposed in utero to fallout radioiodine. The data base from the Utah Fallout Study (Kerber et...
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Published in | Health physics (1958) Vol. 70; no. 4; p. 559 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
01.04.1996
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get more information |
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Summary: | An incident in which a young women became pregnant soon after being treated with 444 MBq 131 I for Graves disease prompted us to search local records for the occurrence of thyroid abnormalities among people exposed in utero to fallout radioiodine. The data base from the Utah Fallout Study (Kerber et al. 1993) indicated that there had been 480 cohort subjects for whom dose to thyroid from fallout radioiodine had been calculated and who could have received any thyroid dose before birth (2473 subjects had been re-examined in 1985-86 of the 4818 examined in 1965-70). Of these 480 subjects in this category, 403 of them could be located in the 1980's and were examined with abnormalities. Although nodules, thyroiditis, hypothyroidism and goiter were seen among the 375 persons with in utero thyroid doses from fallout radioiodine below 0.42 Gy, no thyroid abnormalities of any occurred in the 4 persons with in utero thyroid doses of 0.5 to 2.6 Gy. In addition, no neoplasia was found in any of the 403 subjects examined about 2 decades after in utero fallout exposure. These limited data do not indicate that the fetal thyroid is more sensitive than the postnatal thyroid by more than about a factor of about 4 when thyroid dose is considered and by not much more than unity when the comparison is based on dose equivalent (x ray vs. radioiodine). |
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ISSN: | 0017-9078 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00004032-199604000-00015 |