Ribeiro EP, Rhoden EL, Horn MM, Rhoden C, Lima LP, Toniolo L · 2007
Researchers exposed adult rats to cell phone radiation (1,835-1,850 MHz) for one hour daily over 11 weeks to test effects on reproductive function. They found no changes in testosterone levels, sperm count, testicular weight, or tissue damage compared to unexposed rats. This study suggests that typical cell phone radiation exposure may not harm male fertility in the short term.
Hardell L et al. · 2007
Swedish researchers studied 888 men with testicular cancer and 870 healthy controls to see if using cell phones or cordless phones increased cancer risk. They found no meaningful association between phone use and either type of testicular cancer (seminoma or non-seminoma), with risk estimates hovering around normal levels regardless of phone type. The study also found no connection between where men kept their phones (like trouser pockets) and cancer development.
Yan JG, Agresti M, Bruce T, Yan YH, Granlund A, Matloub HS. · 2007
Researchers exposed male rats to cellular phone emissions for 6 hours daily over 18 weeks and found significantly higher rates of sperm cell death compared to unexposed rats. The exposed rats also showed abnormal clumping of sperm cells that wasn't present in the control group. This suggests that keeping cell phones close to reproductive organs could harm male fertility.
Wdowiak A, Wdowiak L, Wiktor H. · 2007
Polish researchers studied 304 men seeking fertility treatment and compared sperm quality between those who didn't use mobile phones, occasional users, and regular users for over 2 years. They found that longer mobile phone use was associated with more abnormally shaped sperm cells and reduced sperm movement (motility). This suggests that regular mobile phone use may contribute to male fertility problems.
Panagopoulos DJ et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed fruit flies to two different types of cell phone radiation - GSM 900 MHz (used in older phones) and DCS 1800 MHz (used in newer phones) - to compare their biological effects. Both types of radiation significantly reduced the flies' ability to reproduce, but the lower frequency GSM 900 MHz radiation proved more harmful than the higher frequency DCS 1800 MHz radiation. The study suggests that radiation intensity matters more than the specific frequency when it comes to biological damage.
Panagopoulos DJ, Chavdoula ED, Nezis IP, Margaritis LH · 2007
Greek researchers exposed fruit flies to cell phone radiation at 900 MHz and 1800 MHz frequencies for just 6 minutes daily over 6 days, then examined their reproductive cells for DNA damage. They found widespread cell death and DNA fragmentation in egg-producing cells that normally don't die during early development. This cell death explained why the flies' egg production dropped dramatically in the researchers' previous studies.
Liu XY et al. · 2007
Chinese researchers studied 200 women who had early miscarriages and compared their daily habits to 200 women with normal pregnancies. They found that women who used microwave ovens and mobile phones were significantly more likely to experience spontaneous abortion, with mobile phone users showing over 4 times higher risk. The study suggests that common household electromagnetic devices may increase miscarriage risk during early pregnancy.
Guney M, Ozguner F, Oral B, Karahan N, Mungan T. · 2007
Researchers exposed female rats to 900 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone frequencies) for 30 minutes daily over 30 days and examined the effects on endometrial tissue (the lining of the uterus). The radiation caused significant oxidative damage and tissue inflammation in the endometrium, but these harmful effects were largely prevented when the rats were given vitamins E and C. This suggests that cell phone-frequency radiation may damage reproductive tissues through oxidative stress, but antioxidant protection could help mitigate these effects.
Amara S et al. · 2006
Researchers exposed male rats to static magnetic fields (128 mT) for one hour daily over 30 days to study effects on reproductive health. While sperm count remained normal, the magnetic field exposure significantly reduced testosterone levels in both blood and testicles, and caused DNA damage through oxidative stress. This suggests static magnetic fields may disrupt hormone production even when fertility appears unaffected.
Cao YN et al · 2006
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for 8 hours daily throughout pregnancy. The exposed mothers gained less weight, had fewer successful pregnancies, and their offspring showed delayed development including slower growth and later eye opening. This study suggests power line frequency EMF may harm both maternal health and fetal development.
Remondini D et al · 2006
Insufficient information provided. Only the title and publication details are available; no abstract was supplied. The title indicates this is a review article examining gene expression changes in human cells following exposure to mobile phone microwaves, published in Proteomics in 2006.
Finnie JW, Cai Z, Blumbergs PC, Manavis J, Kuchel TR. · 2006
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to 900 MHz cell phone radiation for one hour daily throughout pregnancy to see if it would stress developing fetal brains. They measured c-fos, a protein that appears when brain cells are under stress. The study found no difference in stress markers between exposed and unexposed fetal brains, suggesting this level of radiation didn't cause detectable neural stress during development.
Finnie JW, Blumbergs PC, Cai Z, Manavis J, Kuchel TR. · 2006
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to cell phone-like radiation (900 MHz) for one hour daily throughout pregnancy to see if it would damage the blood-brain barrier in developing fetal brains. The blood-brain barrier is a protective filter that prevents harmful substances from entering brain tissue. They found no damage to this protective barrier in any brain region examined, suggesting the radiation exposure did not compromise brain protection during development.
Oral B et al. · 2006
Turkish researchers exposed female rats to 900-MHz radiation (similar to older cell phones) for 30 minutes daily over 30 days and found it caused cell death and oxidative damage in the endometrium, the tissue lining the uterus. However, when rats were given vitamins E and C before exposure, these protective antioxidants significantly reduced the harmful effects. This suggests that cell phone radiation may damage reproductive tissues through oxidative stress, but antioxidants might offer some protection.
Ferreira AR et al. · 2006
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to cell phone radiation during pregnancy and found their offspring had significantly more DNA damage in their blood cells compared to unexposed offspring. The DNA damage appeared as micronuclei (small fragments of broken chromosomes) in red blood cells, indicating the radiation affected developing blood-forming tissues. This suggests cell phone radiation during pregnancy may cause genetic damage in developing offspring, even though the study found no changes in oxidative stress markers.
Erogul O et al. · 2006
Researchers exposed sperm samples from 27 men to radiation from an active 900 MHz cell phone and compared them to unexposed samples. The cell phone radiation significantly reduced sperm movement, with fewer sperm swimming rapidly or slowly, and more sperm becoming completely immobile. This suggests that the electromagnetic fields from cell phones can directly impair male fertility by damaging sperm function.
Oral B et al. · 2006
Researchers exposed rats to 900 MHz cell phone radiation for 30 minutes daily over 30 days and found it caused cell death and oxidative damage in endometrial tissue (the lining of the uterus). However, when rats were given vitamins E and C before exposure, these protective antioxidants significantly reduced the cellular damage. This suggests that cell phone radiation may harm reproductive tissues through oxidative stress, but antioxidant vitamins may offer some protection.
Forgacs Z et al. · 2006
Hungarian researchers exposed male mice to cell phone-like radiation (1800 MHz GSM) for 48 hours at very low power levels (0.018-0.023 W/kg). They found that exposed mice had significantly higher testosterone levels in their blood and increased red blood cell counts, though no visible damage to reproductive organs. The study suggests that even brief, low-level microwave exposure can trigger measurable hormonal changes in male reproductive systems.
Aksen F, Akdag MZ, Ketani A, Yokus B, Kaya A, Dasdag S. · 2006
Scientists exposed female rats to 50-Hz magnetic fields (household electrical frequency) for 50-100 days. The study found significant cellular damage in ovaries and uterus, including broken cell structures and increased oxidative stress. This suggests prolonged exposure to common electrical frequencies may harm female reproductive organs.
Hong R, Zhang Y, Liu Y, Weng EQ · 2005
This study examined the effects of 50 Hz electromagnetic fields at two different intensities (0.2 mT and 6.4 mT) on DNA damage and sperm chromatin structure in mice exposed for 4 weeks. The researchers found that EMF exposure increased DNA strand breakage in testicular cells and induced abnormal sperm chromatin condensation, with both measured parameters showing statistically significant increases compared to control levels.
Ozguner M et al. · 2005
Turkish researchers exposed male rats to 900 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phones) for 30 minutes daily over 4 weeks and examined effects on reproductive organs. While the study found decreased testosterone levels and some structural changes in testicular tissue, the researchers concluded these changes did not significantly impact sperm production or overall reproductive function. The findings suggest cell phone-type radiation may cause hormonal changes but may not severely impair male fertility at these exposure levels.
Kilgallon SJ, Simmons LW. · 2005
Researchers studied how different visual stimuli affect sperm quality in men, while also examining lifestyle factors that influence semen. They found that men who viewed certain images had higher percentages of motile (moving) sperm in their samples. The study also confirmed that storing mobile phones close to the testicles can decrease semen quality, adding to growing evidence about EMF effects on male fertility.
Fejes I et al. · 2005
Researchers at the University of Szeged studied 371 men to examine whether cell phone use affects sperm quality. They found that men who used their phones more frequently and for longer periods had significantly slower-swimming sperm, with heavy users showing 48.7% fast-swimming sperm compared to 40.6% in light users. This matters because sperm motility (swimming ability) is crucial for male fertility.
Aitken RJ, Bennetts LE, Sawyer D, Wiklendt AM, King BV. · 2005
Researchers exposed mice to cell phone-level radiation (900 MHz) for 12 hours daily over a week and examined sperm DNA for damage. While the mice appeared healthy and sperm counts looked normal, detailed genetic analysis revealed significant DNA damage in both the mitochondria (cellular powerhouses) and nuclear DNA of sperm cells. This suggests that radiofrequency radiation can harm genetic material in reproductive cells even when other measures appear normal.
Diem E, Schwarz C, Adlkofer F, Jahn O, Rudiger H. · 2005
Researchers exposed human cells and rat cells to 1800 MHz mobile phone radiation at levels similar to what phones emit during calls. After 16 hours of exposure, both cell types showed DNA strand breaks (damage to genetic material). The damage occurred at non-thermal levels, meaning it wasn't caused by heating effects, and intermittent exposure patterns caused more damage than continuous exposure.