Abstract

A postmortem study was conducted to assess the feasibility of measuring bone lead concentrations noninvasively in vivo. Characteristic L x rays were induced with an external source of 125I in the superficial tibial cortex of the intact legs of six adults who had no history of occupational exposure to lead. Tibial lead concentrations in the same bones subsequently determined by flameless atomic absorption spectroscopy varied from 15 to 35 micrograms Pb/g wet weight. The upper limit for the modern normal range of lead in the bone is about 25 mg Pb/g wet tissue. The linear correlation coefficient (r) between the measurements made with x-ray fluorescence and lead concentration by absorption spectroscopy was 0.90. Radiation doses of 10 mGy (1 rad) to 1 cm2 of skin, with associated doses to the marrow of adjacent bone of about 0.6 mGy (60 mrad), yielded net lead fluorescence signals ranging from one to seven times the standard deviation of background.

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