A. N. Bereznitskaya · 1966
Soviet researchers in 1966 studied how 10-centimeter microwave radiation affected reproductive capacity in female mice. This early research examined whether microwave exposure could impact fertility and breeding success in laboratory animals. The study represents one of the earliest investigations into how electromagnetic radiation might interfere with mammalian reproduction.
Horodets'ka SF · 1963
This 1963 Soviet research examined how centimeter-wavelength radio waves affected fertility in female mice. The study represents early scientific investigation into whether microwave radiation exposure could impact reproductive health in laboratory animals. This pioneering research helped establish the foundation for understanding EMF effects on biological systems.
D. MAKOW, H. GRICE · 1963
This 1963 research by K. Makow investigated how radio frequency heating affects human sperm. The study examined the relationship between RF energy exposure and sperm function, representing early scientific inquiry into electromagnetic field effects on male reproductive health. This work laid groundwork for understanding how wireless technology might impact fertility.
A. N. Bereznitskaya · 1961
This 1961 study exposed female mice to 10-centimeter microwave radiation at 10 mW/cm² and found significant reproductive problems. The irradiated mice experienced disrupted menstrual cycles, partial sterility, increased stillbirths, and offspring with slower growth and development. This early research demonstrated that microwave radiation can harm female fertility and fetal development.
Unknown authors · 1950
This comprehensive review analyzed studies from the past decade examining how electromagnetic fields (EMF) from cell phones, WiFi, and power lines affect cellular oxidative stress in animals and laboratory cells. Most animal studies and many cell studies showed that both radiofrequency EMF (like cell phones) and extremely low frequency magnetic fields (like power lines) increased harmful reactive oxygen species production. The research suggests EMF exposure may impact neurological function, DNA stability, immune response, and reproduction through oxidative stress mechanisms.
Unknown authors · 1950
This comprehensive review examined a decade of research on how electromagnetic fields (EMF) from cell phones, WiFi, and power lines create oxidative stress in animals and cells. Most studies found that both radiofrequency radiation and extremely low frequency magnetic fields increase harmful reactive oxygen species, potentially affecting brain function, DNA stability, immune response, and reproduction. The findings add scientific weight to concerns about widespread EMF exposure from our increasingly connected world.
Macleod J, Hotchkiss RS · 1941
This 1941 study examined how elevated body temperature (fever) affects sperm production in men, building on earlier animal research showing that heat exposure damages sperm-producing cells in the testes. The researchers found that fever significantly reduced total sperm counts at various time intervals after the temperature elevation, confirming that heat is directly harmful to male fertility.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2.45 GHz microwave radiation (the same frequency as microwave ovens and WiFi) for 100 minutes daily during critical pregnancy days. They found no significant differences in pregnancy rates, fetal development, or birth defects between exposed and unexposed groups. However, higher power levels proved lethal to adult rats from overheating.
W.D. Travers, R.J. Vetter
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to low-level microwave radiation and found changes in their blood's iron-binding capacity, specifically affecting transferrin protein levels. This study confirmed earlier Soviet research showing that microwave exposure can alter protein composition in blood and organs at power densities that don't cause heating. The findings suggest microwave radiation may affect how the body transports essential nutrients during pregnancy.
Unknown authors
Scientists exposed 236 pregnant mice to 148 MHz radiofrequency radiation for one hour daily throughout pregnancy at power levels similar to wireless devices. The exposed mice produced significantly lighter offspring compared to unexposed controls, though no visible birth defects were observed. This suggests RF radiation during pregnancy may affect fetal development even at relatively low exposure levels.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (500 μW/cm²) for 20 hours daily during pregnancy. The exposed offspring showed seven times higher death rates, delayed eye opening, temperature regulation problems, and lasting behavioral and growth changes into adulthood. The study demonstrates that prenatal microwave exposure can cause significant developmental problems even when no effects are visible at birth.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation at 500 microwatts per square centimeter throughout pregnancy to study developmental effects on offspring. This study replicated earlier work using different frequency microwaves to investigate how prenatal EMF exposure might affect physiological and behavioral development in mammals.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed 24 pregnant rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (the same frequency as microwave ovens) for 8 hours daily throughout pregnancy at power levels that didn't raise body temperature. They found no significant effects on fetal development, birth outcomes, or behavioral development in offspring through two generations.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed rats to strong 60 Hz electric fields (100 kV/m) for up to 30 days to test effects on reproduction and development. The study found no impacts on mating behavior, fertility, fetal development, or sperm quality. This suggests that extremely low frequency electric fields at these levels may not significantly harm reproductive health in mammals.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to microwave radiation at 2450 MHz (the same frequency as microwave ovens and WiFi) for 3 hours daily during critical brain development periods. They then tested the newborn pups for basic reflexes and neurological development from birth through 21 days old. The study aimed to understand whether low-level prenatal microwave exposure affects behavioral development in offspring.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (the same frequency used in microwave ovens and some WiFi) to study birth defects. The study found that specific abnormalities only occurred at radiation levels high enough to kill the mother rats, while lower levels still caused reduced fetal body weight and brain mass.
Unknown authors
This technical report examined the effects of 2.45 GHz microwave radiation exposure on pregnant mice, focusing on potential developmental impacts during pregnancy. The research investigated whether microwave radiation at this frequency could cause birth defects or other reproductive harm. This frequency is commonly used in microwave ovens and some wireless devices, making the findings relevant to human exposure concerns.
L. M. Liu, F. J. Rosenbaum, W. F. Pickard
Researchers exposed darkling beetle pupae to low-level microwave radiation and found statistically significant birth defects at power levels as low as 200 microwatts. The study showed that total radiation dose, not just power level, determines the severity of developmental damage in these insects.