van Nierop LE et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed 31 healthy volunteers to magnetic fields from a 7 Tesla MRI scanner while they performed cognitive tests. They found that attention, concentration, and spatial orientation abilities declined significantly when people moved their heads in these strong magnetic fields. The effects were dose-dependent, with stronger magnetic fields causing greater impairment in brain function.
Legros A et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed people to strong 60 Hz magnetic fields (like power lines emit) for one hour. The exposure impaired balance and increased hand tremor, even though brain waves stayed normal. This shows power-frequency fields can affect movement control in subtle ways.
Korpinar MA, Kalkan MT, Tuncel H. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as household electrical wiring) for 21 days and measured their anxiety levels using standard behavioral tests. The exposed rats showed significantly higher anxiety and stress-related behaviors compared to unexposed rats, spending much less time in open, exposed areas of test mazes. This suggests that prolonged exposure to power-frequency magnetic fields may increase stress responses in the brain.
Janać B et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed young and older gerbils to power-line frequency magnetic fields for seven days. Both age groups showed significant behavioral changes, with younger animals becoming more active. The effects persisted three days after exposure ended, indicating potential lasting impacts on brain function.
Fournier NM, Mach QH, Whissell PD, Persinger MA. · 2012
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to different intensities of complex magnetic fields throughout pregnancy to study brain development effects. They found that exposure to low-intensity magnetic fields (30-50 nanotesla) caused permanent damage to the hippocampus - the brain region crucial for learning and memory - and impaired fear learning behavior in the offspring. Surprisingly, weaker and stronger magnetic field exposures didn't cause these problems, suggesting a specific vulnerability window.
Cui Y, Ge Z, Rizak JD, Zhai C, Zhou Z, Gong S, Che Y. · 2012
Researchers exposed mice to magnetic fields from power lines and appliances, then tested their learning abilities. The exposed mice showed significant learning problems and brain cell damage in memory regions, suggesting everyday electromagnetic fields may harm brain function.
Cho SI et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to 60 Hz magnetic fields (like those from power lines) for five days and found increased nitric oxide production in key brain regions. While brain structure remained normal, the biochemical changes suggest power-frequency magnetic fields can alter brain chemistry and potentially affect neurological function.
Megha K et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to cell phone-level microwave radiation (900 MHz) for 2 hours daily over 30 days and found significant brain damage including memory problems, cellular stress, and inflammation. The exposure level was extremely low - about 1,000 times weaker than current safety limits - yet still caused measurable harm to brain tissue. This challenges the assumption that only high-intensity radiation poses health risks.
Avci B, Akar A, Bilgici B, Tunçel ÖK · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to cell phone-level radiation (1.8 GHz) for one hour daily for three weeks and found it caused protein damage in brain tissue. The study also tested whether garlic extract could protect against this damage and found it significantly reduced the brain protein damage caused by the radiation. This suggests that cell phone radiation can harm brain proteins, but certain antioxidants may offer some protection.
Tasset I et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats with Huntington's disease-like symptoms to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (60 Hz at 0.7 milliTesla) for 21 days. The EMF exposure improved the rats' neurological function, increased protective brain proteins, and prevented nerve cell death in the brain region most affected by Huntington's disease. This suggests that specific types of EMF exposure might have therapeutic potential for neurodegenerative diseases.
Pilla AA · 2012
Researchers exposed brain cells to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields at 27.12 MHz and found the fields instantly triggered a nearly 3-fold increase in nitric oxide production. Nitric oxide is a crucial signaling molecule that helps regulate blood flow, immune responses, and healing processes in the body. The study shows that EMF exposure can immediately alter fundamental cellular communication pathways.
Cui Y, Ge Z, Rizak JD, Zhai C, Zhou Z, Gong S, Che Y. · 2012
Researchers exposed mice to power line frequency magnetic fields for 4 hours daily over 12 weeks. The exposed mice showed impaired learning and memory abilities, plus brain damage from oxidative stress. This suggests household electrical fields may affect cognitive function.
Akpinar D, Ozturk N, Ozen S, Agar A, Yargicoglu P · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low-frequency electric fields at two different strengths for one hour daily over 14 days, then measured brain and eye damage. They found that both exposure levels significantly increased oxidative stress (cellular damage from harmful molecules) and impaired visual processing in the brain. The higher exposure level caused more damage, suggesting a dose-response relationship between electric field strength and biological harm.
Tasset I et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats with a Huntington's disease-like condition to 60 Hz electromagnetic fields at 0.7 milliTesla (similar to standing very close to power lines) for 4 hours daily over 21 days. The electromagnetic field exposure significantly protected brain cells from damage, reduced harmful oxidative stress, and preserved neurons that would otherwise die from the disease. This suggests that certain types of electromagnetic fields might have therapeutic potential for neurodegenerative diseases.
Shafiei SA et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed different head areas to low-frequency magnetic fields and measured brain waves. The magnetic fields altered brain activity patterns across multiple regions, not just where exposed, showing that localized magnetic field exposure can affect broader brain function than previously expected.
Schmid MR et al. · 2012
Swiss researchers exposed 25 young men to cell phone radiation before sleep and monitored their brain waves overnight. The radiation measurably altered brain activity during sleep, changing specific wave patterns even though exposure lasted only 30 minutes before bedtime, demonstrating electromagnetic fields affect brain function.
Sakhnini L, Al Ali H, Al Qassab N, Al Arab E, Kamal A. · 2012
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to power line frequency electromagnetic fields for seven days, then tested their babies' motor skills. Mice exposed in the womb showed significant learning deficits compared to unexposed mice, suggesting developing brains are particularly vulnerable to EMF during pregnancy.
Rageh MM, El-Gebaly RH, El-Bialy NS. · 2012
Researchers exposed newborn rats to magnetic fields at 0.5 milliTesla (similar to levels near some power lines) for 30 days and found significant DNA damage in brain cells and bone marrow. The study also detected a four-fold increase in cellular abnormalities and signs of oxidative stress (cellular damage from harmful molecules). This suggests that developing organisms may be particularly vulnerable to magnetic field exposure during critical growth periods.
Rauš S, Selaković V, Radenović L, Prolić Z, Janać B. · 2012
Serbian researchers exposed gerbils with induced stroke-like brain damage to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for seven days. The magnetic field exposure significantly reduced the hyperactive behavior that typically follows brain injury from lack of blood flow. This suggests that extremely low frequency magnetic fields may influence brain recovery processes after stroke or similar injuries.
Legros A et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed people to 60 Hz magnetic fields (like those from power lines) for one hour. The exposure reduced standing balance and increased hand tremors, suggesting these common electrical frequencies can affect nervous system control of movement without obvious brain changes.
Janać B et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed young and older gerbils to 50 Hz magnetic fields (power line frequency) for seven days. Both age groups showed significant changes in movement and activity levels that persisted for days after exposure ended, indicating brain motor centers are sensitive to electromagnetic fields.
Fournier NM, Mach QH, Whissell PD, Persinger MA. · 2012
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to extremely weak magnetic fields (similar to power line levels) throughout pregnancy and found that specific exposure levels caused permanent brain damage in the offspring. The baby rats exposed to low-intensity fields (30-50 nT) developed smaller hippocampus regions and showed impaired learning abilities as adults. Interestingly, both weaker and stronger magnetic field exposures didn't cause these problems, suggesting a narrow 'danger zone' of exposure intensity.
Cui Y, Ge Z, Rizak JD, Zhai C, Zhou Z, Gong S, Che Y. · 2012
Researchers exposed mice to extremely low frequency magnetic fields (the type emitted by power lines and electrical devices) for 4 hours daily and tested their learning abilities. The exposed mice showed significant impairments in both spatial memory and habit formation, along with increased oxidative stress (cellular damage) in key brain regions responsible for learning and memory.
Cho SI et al. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to 60 Hz magnetic fields (from household electrical systems) for five days and found increased nitric oxide production in key brain regions. This brain chemical affects blood flow and neuron communication, suggesting everyday power-frequency magnetic field exposure may alter fundamental brain chemistry.
Akpinar D, Ozturk N, Ozen S, Agar A, Yargicoglu P. · 2012
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low-frequency electric fields (the type generated by power lines) for one hour daily over two weeks. The exposed animals showed significant damage to brain and retinal tissue, including increased oxidative stress (cellular damage from free radicals) and disrupted visual processing. This suggests that even brief daily exposures to electric fields can harm the nervous system and vision.