World Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology
Vol.1 No.2(2011), Article ID:6364,9 pages DOI:10.4236/wjnst.2011.12007

Investigation of Gamma-Emitting Natural Radioactive Contents in Three Types of Vernonia Consumed in Cameroon

Thomas B. Makon1, Robert Martin Nemba1, Pascal Tchokossa2*

1Laboratoire de Chimie Théorique et Physique, Département de Chimie Inorganique,

Faculté des Sciences Université de Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroun

2Department of Physics, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria

E-mail: *ptchokos@yahoo.com

Received March 24, 2011; revised April 28, 2011; accepted June 2, 2011

Keywords: Radionuclides, Specific Activity, Dose, Vernonia, Gamma-Ray, Cameroon

Abstract

The specific activity concentration and the derived Annual Effective Dose (AED) in three types of vernonia cultivated and consumed within and outside Cameroon were measured by means of a well-calibrated high-purity germanium detector. Vernonia samples were collected directly from the production farms, oven-dried to a constant mass, crushed, sieved and sealed for at least a month before analysis. The specific activity of 238U in the three types of vernonia ranged from 20 - 50 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 42 ± 15 Bq·kg−1, 232Th from 9 - 22 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 17 ± 7 Bq·kg−1 while 40K ranged from 115 - 460 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 302 ± 36 Bq·kg−1. The average AED for 40K, 238U and 232Th were 0.15, 0.92 and 0.92 mSv·y−1 respectively. 238U and 232Th show the same trends both for the regional distribution of the radioactivity content and the AED. The discrepancies in our data can be attributed to many factors such as geological formation, foliar deposition, type and age of the plant, etc. Although the results obtained represent only some fractions of the standard limit, but they are within some range obtained in other countries.

1. Introduction

Exposure to ionizing radiation is generally regarded as undesirable at all levels although no harmful effects are known to follow very low-level exposures. Recently, considerable attention has been given to low-level exposure arising from naturally occurring radionuclides, particularly 238U, 232Th, their decay products and 40K. Natural radiation sources are the very important and they deliver the highest radiation dose to which human beings are exposed [1-3]. Natural radionuclides are present in air breathed by humans, in food [4], drinking water [5,6] as well as the ground from which human settlements are built [7]. When ingested or inhaled, naturally occurring radionuclides are distributed among body organs according to the metabolism of the element involved, which normally exhibits varying sensitivities to radiation [8]. Radioelements contents have been measured in various food and drinking water samples by several methods, but their concentrations differ from one place to another. Previous studies have shown that there are three food categories, namely: fish and shellfish, cereals (excluding rice) and vegetables, found to be the main contributors to the daily intakes [9].

Thus, varying doses and risks result from the consumption and the exposure to these radionuclides. Cameroon’s population, whose majority is rural, feeds mainly on farm products based principally on vegetables.

It is noted that one of the major direct contaminations of man by ionizing radiations is done through the food chain. So, accurate estimation of the occurrence of natural radionuclides in foods will provide information from which the estimation of the average radiation exposure of the public in some localities can be made. Also, the knowledge of intakes of some radionuclides (such as 238U and 232Th) is important for estimating the metabolic parameters of uptake and retentions of those radioelements in human body [9,10]. The leaves which constitute the eatable part of the plant, are not only consumed in the whole country Cameroon with a consumption rate of about 40%, but exported to the neighbouring countries like Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and Central Africa Republic. To the best of our knowledge, there is no published or on-going research of radionuclides concentration in this plant in Cameroon and the present investigation is the first systematic effort to provide data on this aspect.

The purpose of this study is to identify radioelements contained in the edible vernonia cultivated in Cameroon, evaluate their specific activity concentration, and hence derive the Annual Effective Dose (AED) resulting from their consumption. The result would therefore constitute a contribution to the establishment of a standard database of the natural radioactivity of edible plants in Cameroon.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Area

Cameroon has a population of about 19,000,000 peoples as adapted by the recent headcount and a land mass area of 475,440 km2.The study area is located within the country between the latitude 1˚71'0"N and 6˚71'0"N, and the longitude 8˚71'0"E and 13˚71'0"E, in the northern hemisphere precisely in Central Africa as shown in Table 1 and Figure 1. It shares boundaries with the East province in the East, Adamawa in the North, Republic of Nigeria and the Atlantic Ocean in the West, and Equatorial Guinea and Gabon in the South. The area is tropical in nature with two climatic seasons viz: wet season which begins in March/April and ends in October with a break in August, and the dry season which begins in November and ends in March. The soil of the area is generally lateritic with some clay intercalation, while the geology of the area is essentially crystalline basement complex with dominant rock suites being granite gneisses charnokites [11].

2.2. Sample Collection

The main source of anthropogenic radionuclide exposure of the indigenous population of this area is environmental contamination of soil, vegetation and water. Information on the radioactivity content, in food products consumed by the population on the structure and composition of the inhabitant’s was needed. The environmental sampling focused on the various foodstuffs constituting the indigenous population’s diet, namely the consumption of vegetables especially vernonia, since there is a great belief that the whole plant is used for therapeutic needs in most parts of African. The vernonia is an asteraceae with bitter leaves, commonly called “ndole”; it generally occurs in three species namely, Amygdalina; Calvoana and Richardiana. The essential differentiation lies at the level of leaf morphologies, and the population eats them without any distinction.

A total number of 63 samples of various vernonia were collected between 14th May and 12th August 2003 from nine major supply towns of the country, where different types of this plant exist and whose consumption rate is very significant, directly from the agricultural farms, owned by the authors and some indigenes (as listed in Table 1 and shown in Figure 1).

In each town, sample collection was concentrated in those vernonia species. The leaves were collected directly from the plant at two different stages namely: when the leaves have just started budding and again when the leaves are about to shed. They were oven-dried under a temperature of 87˚C within one day (24 hours) [12], and were withdrawn, then crushed and sieved using a 2 mm sieve mesh. All the samples were placed thereafter in a vertical cylindrical plastic container named Marinelli beaker, previously washed, rinsed with diluted HCl and dried, and sealed for at least four weeks to allow a sufficient time for 238U and 232Th to attain a state of secular radioactive equilibrium with their corresponding progenies prior to gamma spectroscopy [12-15].

2.3. Instrumentation

The counting equipment used consists of a Canberra vertical cylindrical high-purity coaxial germanium (HPGe) detector with model GC2018-7500 and serial number b 87063, enclosed in a 100 mm thick lead shield. The HPGe detector was connected to a Canberra computerassisted Multichannel analyzer (MCA). Accurate energy and efficiency calibrations of the gammaspectrometry system were made using a standard source of radionuclides supplies by the International Energy Agency (IAEA), Vienna, Austria and the Isotope Products Laboratories, Burbank California, USA. The descriptions of the gamma spectrometry system as well as more details on the calibration are well documented [13,14]. An empty Marinelli beaker with the same geometry as that of the sample was used as background. The counting time for accumulating spectral for both the samples and background was set at 36,000 s. Each container was counted twice in order to check the stability of the counting system. The gamma spectroscopy analysis employed in this work was based on a computer program SAMPO 90 which matched g-energy at various energy levels to a library of possible isotopes. This data analysis routine subtracted a linear background distribution from pulse-height spectra of both the sample and the background in addition to the net background peak area being subtracted from the corresponding net peak area for a particular radionuclide. The resolution of the HPGe detector made it possible to identify a wide spectrum of g-rays in the sample and the photopeaks observed with regularity in the samples were identified as belonging to the radioactive decay series headed by238U and 232Th and

Table 1. Sampling locations.

Figure 1. Map showing the study area.

a non-series radionuclide 40K respectively. The other radionuclides, if present, appeared infrequently at low levels, or occurred at levels below the minimum detectable limit (MDL). The measurement error was about 30% and the method used for this study had the following MDLs: 0.9 Bq·kg−1 for 238U, 0.6 Bq·kg−1 for 232Th and 2.6 Bq·kg−1 for 40K, all at a measuring time of 36,000 s. The activity concentration of 40K was determined directly by its g-line of 1460.8 keV, while that of 238U and 232Th were estimated by measuring the g-ray lines of 609.3 keV of 214Bi and 1120.3 keV of 214Bi; and 969.0 keV of 228Ac and 583.0 keV of 208Tl respectively.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Radioactivity Content in Leaves

The distribution of the average activity concentrations of the radionuclides determined from the measurement of the various types of vernonia analyzed is shown in Table 2 and Figure 2. From this table, the specific activity concentrations of 40K ranged from 115 - 429 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 292 ± 35 Bq·kg−1 in amygdalina; 187 - 460 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 334 ± 40 Bq·kg−1 in calvoana and 226 - 293 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 263 ± 33 Bq·kg−1 in richardiana. The overall concentration of 40K ranged from 115 to 460 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 302 ± 36 Bq·kg−1. Potassium-40 is the most relatively abundant radioelement of all species. This is not a surprise because 40K is an essential biological element. Its concentration in human tissue is about 63 Bq·kg−1 and ranged between 40 - 600 Bq·kg−1 in food [16]. This concentration is under close metabolic (homeostatic) control [17]; and its variations in dietary composition do not influence significantly the radiation dose received. However its concentrations are not the same in all vernonia. It is highest in calvoana and lowest in richardiana. It is realised that all the samples present potassium-40 concentrations higher than 200 Bq·kg−1, but lower than those reported by other researchers elsewhere [18,19] and in other species [20].

  The specific activity concentrations of 238U ranged from 20 - 50 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 42 ± 15 Bq·kg−1 in amygdalina; 40 - 48 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 45 ±16 Bq·kg−1 in calvoana and 29 - 35 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 32 ± 11 Bq·kg−1 in richardiana. The overall

Table2. Specific activity concentration in various types of vernomia (Bq·kg−1).

Figure 2. Bar chart showing radioactivity content in the various types of vernonia.

concentration of 238U ranged from 20 to 50 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 42 ± 15 Bq·kg−1; while the highest activity concentration was recorded in calvaona. The activity concentration for 238U is relatively higher than that obtained in the leaves of the same plants in India [20].

  The specific activity concentrations of 232Th ranged from 9 - 19 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 17 ± 7 Bq·kg−1 in amygdalina; 15 - 19 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 17 ± 6 Bq·kg−1 in calvoana and 13 - 22 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 18 ± 5 Bq·kg−1 in richardiana, while the overall concentration of 232Th ranged from 9 to 22 Bq·kg−1 with an average of 17 ± 7 Bq·kg−1. The activity concentration for 232Th in all the vernonia analysed is relatively equal but higher than what was reported by Shawki in the plants with the turn of a site of production of uranium in Wyoming in the USA [21].

  Both 40K and 238U activity concentrations were highest in calvaona, followed by amygdalina and later by richardiana. This trend was reversed for 232Th. The relative high concentration of 238U over 232Th may be due to the fact that the acidity and wet condition at this site tend to enhance the solubility and availability of 238U for plant intake. Also foliar deposition of pond water spray containing elevated 238U concentration and subsequent foliar absorption may be another important uptake mechanism [21]. It is also interesting to note that the activity concentration in the leaves in their earlier days of life was significantly higher than when they were getting mature. This trend was observed in all the three radionuclides namely 40K, 238U and 232Th and in all the types of vernonia analysed as observed by Manigandan [22].

3.2. Regional Distribution of Radioactivity

The results of the regional distribution of radioactivity obtained are presented in Table 3 and Figure 3. The average activity concentration for 40K, 238U and 232Th is 307 ± 39, 37 ± 12 and 17 ± 6 Bq·kg−1 in the center; 317 ± 37, 43 ± 15 and 16 ± 5 Bq·kg−1 in the littoral; 263 ± 35,  not detectable and 17 ± 7 Bq·kg−1 in the north-west; 386 ± 34, 45 ± 18 and 18 ± 9 Bq·kg−1 in the south; and finally 212 ± 27, 49 ± 19 and not detectable in the south-west respectively. The highest activity concentration of 40K was found in north-west, while the lowest was insouth-west; 238U was not detected in north-west and it was highest in south-west; contrary 232Th was not de tected in south-west and highest in the center. In fact, the the Atlantic ocean and it is made up of beach sands (unconsolidated) that may wash away potassium and hencereduced its activity concentration as obtained else

Table 3. Regional distribution of radioactivity content in the vernonia analyzed (Bq·kg−1).

Figure 3. Bar chart showing regional distribution of radioactivity content in the vernonia analyzed (Bq·kg−1).

where [23].

The high specific activity of 40K in north-west would be understandable by the fact that, the soil is constituted by granite which usually accumulates potassium-40 [23].

Other contributors may also be the atmospheric deposition of radionuclides on the leaves.

3.3. Annual Effective Doses Due to Vernonia Ingestion.

The Annual Effective Dose (AED) is a useful parameter that enables the radiation from different radionuclides and from different types and sources to estimate the radiation induced health effects associated with intake of radionuclides by the body. It is proportional to the total dose liberated by the radionuclides while residing in the various organs [24].

The AED from a single radionuclide r in one foodstuff f is given by:

where is the effective dose by ingestion of nuclide r (Sv/y),

is the effective dose conversion factor by ingestion of nuclide r (Sv/Bq),

is the activity concentration of nuclide r in ingestion of the food (Bq/kg), and

is the food consumption rate f (kg/y).

  The calculations are based on the assumptions that each person takes food according to the consumption defined in the food balance sheets [25]. The AED from various radionuclides ingested in different types of vernonia with various radionuclides is obtained by summing up over all nuclides and all vernonia collected. The dose conversion factors per gram of ingestion of 40K; 238U and 232Th are 6.2 × 10−9, 2.8 × 10−7 and 6.9 × 10−7 for adults [25-27]. The estimated AED and its regional distribution are shown in Tables 4 and 5 respectively, while Figures 4 and 5 illus trate these results. For 238U, the highest AED was obtained in calvoana while the lowest came from richardiana; 232Th also shows the

Table 4. Estimated Annual Effective Dose by ingestion of vernonia (mSv·y−1).

Figure 4. Annual Effective Dose of the vernonia analysed.

Table 5. Regional distribution of Annual Effective Dose (mSv·y−1).

Figure 5. Regional Distribution of Annual Effective Dose in various vernonia.

greater AED in richardiana and the smallest from amygdalina. Similarly, calvoana hasthe biggest AED deriving from 40K and the smallest from richardiana. The same trends are also observed when considering the AED resulting from the three nuclides. Calvoana 2.07 mSv·y−1, followed by amygdalina 1.97 mSv·y−1 and lastly richardiana 1.79 mSv·y−1. The total estimated AED obtained were 1.97, 2.07 and 1.74 mSv·y−1 for amygdalina, calvoana and richardiana respectively. The committed effective dose resulting from ingestion of 238U and 232Th combined in normal background areas was 6.3 mSv and 11 mSv respectively [28]. Therefore, the estimated average AED of 238U and 232Th from all types of vernonia analyzed represent 15% and 8.4% of the said limits. The estimated AED of 40K was 0.15 mSv·y−1 and it comprised 0.01% of the annual dose (AD) limit of 103 mSv·y−1 for the general public [26]. The estimated total AED received from 238U, 232Th and 40K due to consumption of vernonia by the inhabitants (5.83 mSv) was just about 2.01% of the total exposure per person resulting from ingestion of terrestrial radioisotopes (290 mSv) as proposed by the UNSCEAR [28]. 232Th contributed the highest to the mean AED, while the least contributor was 40K. This result is in agreement with other published studies [29-32].

Also the highest AED deriving from uranium and thorium content was obtained in South-west and South with a values of 1.08 mSv·y−1 and 0.96 mSv·y−1 respectively, while the AED was zero for both radionuclides in Northwest and South-west. In fact, North-west is made up of series of mountains among are old volcanoes, resulting in the possible radionuclides depositions that are transported through the erosion process to the South and South-west located almost at the sea level.

4. Conclusions and Recommendations

Baseline data on the concentrations and derived annual effective doses of the natural radionuclides, namely 40K, 238U and 232Th in vernonia produced in Cameroon have been established. The data obtained showed that, while 40K accounting the overall highest contribution of 460 ± 48 Bq·kg−1, the highest for 238U was found in calvoana and that of 232Th was recorded in richardiana with a value of 50 ± 20 Bq·kg−1 and 22 ± 6 Bq·kg−1 respectively. Contrary, 238U and 232Th were the major contributors of the AED with an average values of 0.92 mSv·y−1 for both. The regional distribution of the radioactivity content and derived AED revealed that the southern region recorded the highest, while the least was found in North-west for 40K and 238U. Detected levels for 40K in vernonia might be higher than its specific activities in other foodstuffs because potassium is more concentrated in leaves than in any other parts of the plant. The differences in the results were attributed to many factors such as geological formation of the soil, foliar deposition, species and age of the plant, etc. Although our results are still within the range of some works obtained in many countries, but Cameroon has the particularity in the sense that it is not only the food basket of many neighboring countries, but it is made up of several active and non-active volcanoes, the most recent being the Lake Nyos eruption that happen in 1986. It is therefore recommended that regular monitoring of various matrices in this environment is paramount. Taking into account the mutagenic and carcinogenic effects of some of the elements of the radioactive chain of these radionuclides, their significant presence is a challenge to the authorities for the protection of the inhabitants.

5. Acknowledgements

The authors wish to express their sincere gratitude to the International Atomic Energy Agency for providing standard radioactive sources used for the calibration of the detector system, to the Director, Centre for Energy Research and Development (CERD) Ile-Ife, Osun StateNigeria for providing its laboratory for Gamma Spectrometry analysis, and to Dr. Chijoke Uwasomba of the Department of English, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, for proofread this manuscript.

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