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[en] Occupational health physicians often face the problem of whether to keep pregnant women at work in hospitals where they risk exposure to ionizing radiation. Current legislation requires that doctors ensure a certain level of safety for the embryo and the fetus. The current rules are unsatisfactory, however, because women are not obliged to declare that they are pregnant until the third month, which is one month past the period when he fetus is most sensitive to ionizing radiation. (author). 15 refs
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Rayonnements ionisants en milieu hospitalier. Exposition des femmes enceintes
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[en] Hospitals are producers of small amounts of radioactive waste. Current legislation details exactly how hospitals should manage it. Sealed sources are returned to suppliers. Disposal of unsealed sources, liquid or solid, depends upon their half-life: short-lived radioisotopes (half-life less than two months) are stocked on site while they decay; isotopes with longer half-lives (greater than two months) are handled by a specialist organization (ANDRA). (authors). 8 refs
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Gestion des dechets radioactifs dans les hopitaux des armees
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[en] When high affinity Ca(2+)-binding proteins like calmodulin, or proteins with a high Ca(2+)-binding capacity like calsequestrin, underwent sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis in Laemmli systems, their electrophoretic migration rates were much higher in gels containing 1 mM Ca2+ than in gels containing ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether) N,N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Replacement of EGTA by Ca2+ in the gel, combined with the blotting of electrophoretically separated proteins on polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and subsequent 45Ca2+ overlay, proved a very effective means of detecting Ca(2+)-binding proteins. This combined approach is important since artifacts occur in both techniques when used separately. We found that the usual procedure of adding Ca2+ to the sample before electrophoresis without including it in the gel itself permitted the detection of only very high affinity Ca(2+)-binding proteins
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ALKALINE EARTH METAL COMPOUNDS, ANIMALS, AQUATIC ORGANISMS, ARTHROPODS, BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BETA-MINUS DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, CALCIUM ISOTOPES, CELL CONSTITUENTS, CRUSTACEANS, DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, EVEN-ODD NUCLEI, INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI, INVERTEBRATES, ISOTOPE APPLICATIONS, ISOTOPES, KINETICS, MAMMALS, MEMBRANES, NUCLEI, ORGANIC COMPOUNDS, ORGANOIDS, RADIOISOTOPES, REACTION KINETICS, VERTEBRATES
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