Karen
Silkwood AUTOPSY at Los Alamos Los Alamos Tissue Analysis Program at the
request of DEA
Karen
Silkwood died on November 13, 1974 in a fatal one-car
crash. Since then, her story has achieved worldwide fame
as the subject of many books, magazine and newspaper
articles, and even a major motion picture. Silkwood was a
chemical technician at the Kerr-McGee's plutonium fuels
production plant in Crescent, Oklahoma, and a member of
the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers' Union. She was
also an activist who was critical of plant safety. During
the week prior to her death, Silkwood was reportedly
gathering evidence for the Union to support her claim
that Kerr-McGee was negligent in maintaining plant
safety, and at the same time, was involved in a number of
unexplained exposures to plutonium. The circumstances of
her death have been the subject of great speculation.
After her
death, organs from Silkwood's body were analyzed as part
of the Los Alamos Tissue Analysis Program at the request
of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Oklahoma
City Medical Examiner. Silkwood's case was important to
the program because it was one of very few cases
involving recent exposure to plutonium. It also served to
confirm the contemporary techniques for the measurement
of plutonium body burdens and lung burdens. The following
account is a summary of Silkwood's exposure to plutonium
at the Kerr-McGee plant and the subsequent analysis of
her tissues at Los Alamos.
In the
evening of November 5, plutonium-239 was found on Karen
Silkwood's hands. Silkwood had been working in a glovebox
in the metallography laboratory where she was grinding
and polishing plutonium pellets that would be used in
fuel rods. At 6:30 P.M., she decided to monitor herself
for alpha activity with he detector that was mounted on
the glove box. The right side of her body read 20,000
disintegrations per minute, or about 9 nanocuries, mostly
on the right sleeve and shoulder of her coveralls. She
was taken to the plant's Health Physics Office where she
was given a test called a "nasal swipe". This
test measures a person's exposure to airborne plutonium,
but might also measure plutonium that got on the person's
nose from their hands. The swipe showed an activity of
160 disintegrations per minute, a modest positive result.
The two
gloves in the glovebox Silkwood had been using were
replaced. Strangely, the gloves were found to have
plutonium on the "outside" surfaces that were
in contact with Silkwood's hands; no leaks were found in
the gloves. No plutonium was found on the surfaces in the
room where she had been working and filter papers from
the two air monitors in the room showed that there was no
significant plutonium in the air. By 9:00 P.M.,
Silkwood's cleanup had been completed, and as a
precautionary measure, Silkwood was put on a program in
which her total urine and feces were collected for five
days for plutonium measurements. She returned to the
laboratory and worked until 1:10 A.M., but did no further
work in the glove boxes. As she left the plant, she
monitored herself and found nothing.
Silkwood
arrived at work at 7:30 A.M. on November 6. She examined
metallographic prints and performed paperwork for one
hour, then monitored herself as she left the laboratory
to attend a meeting. Although she had not worked at the
glovebox that morning, the detector registered alpha
activity on her hands. Health physics staff members found
further activity on her right forearm and the right side
of her neck and face, and proceeded to decontaminate her.
At her request, a technician checked her locker and
automobile with an alpha detector, but no activity was
found.
On
November 7, Silkwood reported to the Health Physics
Office at about 7:50 in the morning with her bioassay kit
containing four urine samples and one fecal sample. A
nasal swipe was taken and significant levels of alpha
activity (1,000 to 4,000 dpm on her hands, arm, chest,
neck, and right ear). A preliminary examination of her
bioassay samples showed extremely high levels of activity
(30,000 to 40,000 counts per minute in the fecal sample).
Her locker and automobile were checked again, and
essentially no alpha activity was found.
Following
her cleanup, the Kerr-McGee health physicists accompanied
her to her apartment, which she shared with another
laboratory analyst, Sherri Ellis. The apartment was
surveyed. Significant levels of activity were found in
the bathroom and kitchen, and lower levels of activity
were found in other rooms. In the bathroom, 100,000 dpm
were found on the toilet seat, 40,000 dpm on the floor
mat, and 20,000 dpm on the floor. In the kitchen, they
found 400,000 dpm on a package of bologna and cheese in
the refrigerator, 20,000 dpm on the cabinet top, 20,000
dpm on the floor, 25,000 dpm on the stove sides, and
6,000 dpm on a package of chicken. In the bedroom,
between 500 and 1000 dpm were detected on the pillow
cases and between 500 and 2,000 dpm on the bed sheets.
However, the AEC estimated that the total amount of
plutonium in Silkwood's apartment was no more than 300
micrograms. No plutonium was found outside the apartment.
Ellis was found to have two areas of low level activity
on her, so Silkwood and Ellis returned to the plant where
Ellis was cleaned up.
When asked
how the alpha activity got into her apartment, Silkwood
said that when she produced a urine sample that morning,
she had spilled some for the urine. She wiped off the
container and the bathroom floor with tissue and disposed
of the tissue in the commode. Furthermore, she had taken
a package of bologna from the refrigerator, intending to
make a sandwich for her lunch, but then carried the
bologna into the bathroom and laid it on the closed
toilet seat. She remembered that she had part of her
lunch from November 5 in the refrigerator at work and
decided not to make the sandwich, so returned the bologna
to the refrigerator. Between October 22 and November 6,
high levels of activity had been found in four of the
urine samples that Silkwood had collected at home (33,000
to 1,600,000 dpm), whereas those that were collected at
the Kerr-McGee plant or Los Alamos contained very small
amounts of plutonium if any at all.
The amount
of plutonium at Silkwood's apartment raised concern.
Therefore, Kerr-McGee arranged for Silkwood, Ellis, and
Silkwood's boyfriend, Drew Stephens, who had spent time
at their apartment, to go to Los Alamos for testing. On
Monday, November 11, the trio met with Dr. George Voelz,
the leader of the Laboratory Health Division. He
explained that all of their urine and feces would be
collected and that several whole body and lung counts
would be taken. They would also be monitored for external
activity.
The next
day, Dr. Voelz informed Ellis and Stephens that their
tests showed a small but insignificant amount of
plutonium in their bodies. Silkwood, on the other hand,
had 0.34 nanocuries of americicium-241 (a gamma-emitting
daughter of plutonium-241) in her lungs. Based on the
amount of americium, Dr. Voelz estimated that Silkwood
had about 6 or 7 nanocuries of plutonium-239 in her
lungs, or less than half the maximum permissible lung
burden (16 nanocuries) for workers. Dr. Voelz reassured
Silkwood that, based upon his experience with workers
that had much larger amounts of plutonium in their
bodies, she should not be concerned about developing
cancer or dying from radiation poisoning. Silkwood
wondered whether the plutonium would affect her ability
to have children or cause her children to be deformed.
Dr. Voelz reassured her that she could have normal
children.
Silkwood,
Ellis, and Stephens returned to the Oklahoma City on
November 12. Silkwood and Ellis reported for work the
next day, but they were restricted from further radiation
work. After work that night, Silkwood went to a union
meeting in Crescent, Oklahoma. At the end of the meeting,
at about 7 P.M., she left alone in her car. At 8:05, the
Oklahoma State Highway Patrol was notified of a single
car accident 7 miles south of Crescent. the driver, Karen
Silkwood, was dead at the scene from multiple injuries.
An Oklahoma State Trooper who investigated the accident
reported that Silkwood's death was a result of a classic,
one-car sleeping-driver accident. Later, blood tests
performed as part of the autopsy showed Silkwood had 0.35
milligrams of methaqualone (Quaalude) per 100 milliliters
of blood at the time of her death. That amount id almost
twice the recommended dosage for inducing drowsiness.
About 50 milligrams of undissolved methaqualone remained
in her stomach.
At the
request of the AEC and the Oklahoma State Medical
Examiner, Dr. A. Jay Chapman, who was concerned about
performing an autopsy on someone reportedly contaminated
with plutonium, a team from Los Alamos was sent to make
radiation measurements and assist in the autopsy. Dr.
Voelz, Dr. Michael Stewart, Alan Valentine, and James
Lawrence comprised the team. Because Silkwood's death was
an accident, the coroner did not legally need consent
from the next of kin to perform the autopsy. However,
Silkwood's father was contacted and he gave permission
for the autopsy over the telephone. The autopsy was
performed November 14, 1974, at the University Hospital
in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Appropriate
specimens were collected, preserved, and retained by Dr.
Chapman for his pathological and toxicological
examination. At the request of the coroner and the AEC,
certain organs and bone specimens were removed, packaged,
frozen, and brought back to Los Alamos for analysis of
their plutonium content. Because Silkwood had been
exposed to plutonium and had undergone in vivo plutonium
measurements, her tissue was also used in the Los Alamos
Tissue Analysis Program to determine her actual plutonium
body burden, the distribution of the plutonium between
different organs of her body, and the distribution within
her lung. On November 15, small samples of the liver,
lung, stomach, gastrointestinal tract, and bone were
selected and analysed. The date, shown in Table 1,
indicated clearly that there were 3.2 nanocuries in the
liver, 4.5 nanocuries in the lungs, and a little more
than 7.7 nanocuries in her whole body. These measurements
agreed well with the in vivo measurements made before
Silkwood's death (6 or 7 nanocuries in the lung and a
little more than 7 nanocuries in the whole body).
There was
no significant deposition of plutonium in any other
tissues, including the skeleton. The highest
concentrations measured were in the contents of the
gastrointestinal tract (0.05 nanocurie/gram in the
duodenum and 0.02 nanocurie/gram in a small fecal sample
taken from the large intestine.) This demonstrated that
she had ingested plutonium prior to her death.
With the
exception of the left lung, the remaining unanalyzed
tissues were repackaged and kept frozen until it was
determined whether or not additional analyses were
required. The left lung was thawed, inflated with dry
nitrogen until it was approximately the size that it
would have been in the chest, and re-frozen in that
configuration. It was packed in an insulated shipping
container in dry ice and sent to the lung counting
facility at the Los Alamos Health Research Laboratory.
The data were then compared with the in vivo measurements
made prior to her death. As expected, without the ribs
and associated muscle attenuating the x-rays from the
americium-241, the results for the left lung measured
postmortem were about 50 per cent higher, but not
inconsistent with the in vivo result.
Some of
the most interesting observations made during Silkwood's
tissue analysis were: 1) the distribution of
plutonium-239 within her lung and 2) the concentration of
plutonium in the lung relative to that in the
tracheobronchial lymph nodes (TBLN). After the frozen
left lung was returned to the Tissue Analysis Laboratory,
the superior lobe was divided horizontally into sections.
Those sections were further divided into two parts: the
outer layer of the lung (pleura and sub-pleural tissue)
and the inner soft tissue of the lung (parenchyma). The
plutonium concentrations in the inner and outer parts of
Silkwood's lung were about equal, in stark contrast with
another case examined under the Tissue Analysis Program
in which the concentration in the outer part of the lung
was 22.5 times higher than that in the inner part. That
difference was an indication that Silkwood had probably
been exposed within 30 days prior to her death, whereas
the other case had been exposed years prior to death.
Furthermore, the concentration of plutonium in Silkwood's
lung was about 6 times greater than that in the lymph
nodes, whereas in typical cases that ratio would be about
0.1. Both of those results indicated that Silkwood had
received very recent exposure and supported the view that
the plutonium tends to migrate from the inner part to the
outer part of the lung and to the lymph nodes over time.
The saga of Karen Silkwood continued for
years after her death. Her estate filed a civil suit
against Kerr-McGee for alleged inadequate health and
safety program that led to Silkwood's exposure. The first
trial ended in 1979, with the jury awarding the estate of
Silkwood $10.5 million for personal injury and punitive
damages. This was reversed later by the Federal Court of
Appeals, Denver, Colorado, which awarded $5000 for the
personal property she lost during the cleanup of her
apartment. In 1986, twelve years after Silkwood's death,
the suit was headed for retrial when it was finally
settled out of court for $1.3 million. The Kerr-McGee
nuclear fuel plants closed in 1975. Madeline Felkins
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Madeline FelkinsA Valentine for Everyday and Just for You: Foreverlove, Forevermore xoxoxo Forever Yours, M.
In Memory of Chet Atkins: 1924-2001 'Chester Burton Atkins' died after beating cancer for decades, Saturday, 30 June, 2001. Services will be held in Nashville, Tennessee, Tuesday, 03 July, 2001 at Ryman Auditorium. Godspeed to a great artist who will continue to contribute his guitar art and innovations throughout time. Angelenos and others fondly remember,and celebrate the life of actor and Los Angeles resident, Jack Lemmon who also died this past week, 27 June, 2001. Jack Lemmon was a great pianist and performer who will laughingly be remembered by many as the bass slapping/cross-dressing jazz musician on the lam from gangsters after having witnessed the Saint Valentines' Day Massacre in the classic movie, SOME LIKE it HOT. I will always love and happily remember him in that performance because when I was in elementary school in Riverside, California, my entire class, including my teacher, Ms. Vivian Pace, was taken to a birthday party showing of this movie and a great time was had by all. It was a party I will never forget due to the personal connection that my mother worked with Marilyn Monroe and Bob Mitchum at Rheem Aircraft/Douglass Aircraft before serving active duty during WWII. I will always be grateful to Mr. Lemmon and Ms. Monroe for such a great time and such a great movie. It is one of my favorite movies, and I will continue to enjoy it at whim with my mind's eye for the rest of my life. Adios, Amigoes, Amigas...Yay! Rustic Lane Elementary School and Fox Theaters: Thanks again. P.S. I still love my 'blue teddy' more than words may ever express. xoxoxoxo...M.