XPost: alt.engineering.nuclear
From: richard.pickworth@btopenworld.com
I'd rather not.
Richard
"aji" wrote in message
news:S6qdnfzvyMPsnpffRVnysw@brightview.com...
> Actually, Plutonium should not stay in your lungs for ever because your
> lungs produce mucous to remove the dust in the air. I have been told it
> stays in for a month or two. However, if you work in a Plut facility that
> is not ventilated, your could be breathing it in all the time. AJI
>
> "Gregory L. Hansen" wrote in message
> news:cd4rif$m1s$3@hood.uits.indiana.edu...
>> In article ,
>> daestrom wrote:
>>>
>>>"Harlan Osier" wrote in message
>>>news:89ec59b9.0407121648.7b99eb5e@posting.google.com...
>>>> You can eat it and nothing will happen !
>>>
>>>Sure, encase it in stainless steel and it passes through the GI track
>>>about
>>>as fast as your last meal. And the steel shields any alpha. But lodge a
>>>'raw' chunk of it in your lung where it will irradiate lung tissue for
>>>years
>>>and you're likely to develop a cancer. Inject it into your blood stream
>>>(or
>>>through an open wound) and it may find its way to some bone marrow
>>>(another
>>>cancer).
>>
>> As I recall, according to the BEIR-IV, plutonium workers had been tracked
>> for more than 50 years, and the risk above background is apparantly low
>> enough that there's no epidemiological data that can determine it. So
>> the
>> risk due to plutonium remains theoretical, based on extrapolation of
>> animal studies and other types of exposures in humans.
>>
>>
>> --
>> "The result of this experiment was inconclusive, so we had to use
>> statistics." (Overheard at international physics conference)
>
>
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