[ RadSafe ] Fwd: Effective half life question
edmond0033 at comcast.net
edmond0033 at comcast.net
Wed Oct 24 17:43:50 CDT 2012
The radionuclide that I have run into is Iodine-131. It's biological
half-life is less than its physical half-life
Ed Baratta
edmond0033 at comcast.net
-----Original Message-----
From: radbloom at comcast.net
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 5:27 PM
To: The International Radiation Protection (Health Physics) Mailing List
Subject: Re: [ RadSafe ] Fwd: Effective half life question
Jeffrey,
If you are talking about prepared pharmaceuticals, these would have package
inserts that would include information on the effective half-life for the
particular radiopharmaceutical .
Cindy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Alston" <achris1999@ gmail .com>
To: "The International Radiation Protection (Health Physics) Mailing List" <
radsafe @health.phys. iit . edu >
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 4:16:54 PM
Subject: [ RadSafe ] Fwd: Effective half life question
Jeffrey
There are a multitude of these, depending on exactly what you mean.
The MIRD Committee publishes reports, and there are ICRP Publications
53, 80, and 106. There is also the RADAR website, doseinfo-radar.com.
But you might want to start with NUREG /CR-6345, Radiation Dose
Estimates for Radiopharmaceuticals , of April 1996.
Happy hunting
cja
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Kulp , Jeffrey ( DOH ) <Jeffrey. Kulp @ doh . wa .gov>
Date: Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 2:59 PM
Subject: [ RadSafe ] Effective half life question
To: radsafe @health.phys. iit . edu
Hello Radsafers ,
I have a question that is related to radiopharmaceuticals . I have been
told by a colleague that the effective half-life of a radioactive
isotope can differ based on the chemical preparation the isotope is in.
Essentially the biological half life will change due to the varying
clearance rates for different chemicals, thereby changing the effective
half-life. Is there a database that addresses the different biological
half-lives for various radiopharmaceuticals ?
Thanks,
Jeffrey Kulp , RRPT
Radiation Health Physicist
DOH - Office of Radiation Protection
P.O. Box 47827
Olympia, Washington 98504-7827
(360) 236-3237
"Public Health - Always Working for a Safer and Healthier Washington"
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