Stagg RB, Thomas WJ, Jones RA, Adey WR · 1997
Researchers exposed brain cells (both normal and cancerous glioma cells) to cell phone-like radiofrequency radiation at 836.55 MHz for 24 hours to see if it would promote tumor growth by affecting DNA synthesis. While they found small increases in DNA activity in some cancer cell experiments, this didn't translate to actual increased cell growth or proliferation in either normal or cancerous cells.
Vijayalaxmi et al. · 1997
Researchers exposed cancer-prone mice to 2450 MHz radiofrequency radiation (the same frequency used in microwave ovens and some WiFi) for 20 hours daily over 18 months to test whether it causes DNA damage. They measured micronuclei - tiny fragments that indicate genetic damage - in blood and bone marrow cells. The study found no significant difference in DNA damage between exposed and unexposed mice, suggesting this level of RF exposure did not cause detectable genetic harm.
Gos, P, Eicher, B, Kohli, J, Heyer, WD · 1997
Researchers exposed yeast cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to extremely high frequency electromagnetic fields around 41.7 GHz at very low power levels to see if the radiation affected how quickly the cells divided. After careful testing with proper controls, they found no significant differences in cell division rates between exposed and unexposed yeast. This contradicts some earlier studies that claimed to find biological effects from similar EMF exposures.
Donnellan M, McKenzie DR, French PW · 1997
Researchers exposed immune cells called mast cells to 835 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone frequencies) for 20 minutes three times daily over a week. The exposed cells showed increased DNA synthesis, altered cell shape, and enhanced release of inflammatory substances compared to unexposed cells. These cellular changes persisted for at least a week after the radiation exposure ended, suggesting the effects may trigger lasting biological responses.
Donnellan M, McKenzie DR, French PW. · 1997
Researchers exposed immune cells called mast cells to cell phone radiation at 835 MHz for 20 minutes, three times daily for a week. They found that starting on day four, the cells began growing faster, changed shape, and became more reactive to chemical triggers. What's particularly concerning is that these changes persisted for at least a week after the radiation exposure ended, suggesting the effects may be long-lasting.
Jensh RP · 1997
Pregnant rats exposed to microwave radiation at cell phone and microwave oven frequencies showed concerning effects in offspring. The highest frequency (6000 MHz) caused delayed development, reduced birth weight, and altered brain function, suggesting certain microwave frequencies may affect developing brains.
Vijayalaxmi, Mohan, N, Meltz, ML, Wittler, MA, · 1997
Researchers exposed human blood cells to microwave radiation at 2450 MHz (the same frequency used in microwave ovens and WiFi) for 90 minutes to see if it would damage DNA or affect cell growth. They found no genetic damage, chromosome breaks, or changes in how fast the cells multiplied compared to unexposed cells. This suggests that short-term exposure to this type of radiation at these power levels may not immediately harm human blood cells.
Vollrath L, Spessert R, Kratzsch T, Keiner M, Hollmann H · 1997
German researchers exposed rats and hamsters to 900 MHz radio frequency fields (similar to early cell phones) for up to 6 hours to see if it would affect their pineal glands, which produce the sleep hormone melatonin. They found no changes in melatonin production or pineal gland structure at any exposure level tested. This suggests that short-term RF exposure at these levels doesn't disrupt the body's natural sleep-wake cycle regulation.
Vorobyov VV, Galchenko AA, Kukushkin NI, Akoev IG · 1997
Russian scientists exposed rats to weak cell phone-like radiation (945 MHz) for 10 minutes and found immediate changes in brain wave patterns between left and right brain hemispheres within 20 seconds. This suggests microwave radiation can directly interfere with normal brain electrical activity.
Salford LG, Brun A, Persson BRR · 1997
Researchers injected brain tumor cells into 154 pairs of rats, then exposed half to 915 MHz microwaves (the frequency used by early cell phones) for 7 hours daily over 2-3 weeks while keeping the other half as controls. They found no difference in tumor growth between exposed and unexposed rats, suggesting that microwave exposure did not accelerate existing brain tumors in this particular experimental setup.
Nakamura H, Seto T, Nagase H, Yoshida M, Dan S, Ogino K. · 1997
Japanese researchers exposed pregnant and non-pregnant rats to microwave radiation at 2450 MHz (the same frequency used by microwave ovens and WiFi) for 90 minutes at 10 mW/cm². They found that pregnant rats showed significant immune system suppression, with reduced natural killer cell activity in the spleen, while non-pregnant rats showed no immune changes. The study reveals that pregnancy makes organisms more vulnerable to microwave radiation effects.
Lai H, Carino MA, Singh NP · 1997
Researchers exposed rats to microwave radiation at 2.45 GHz for 2 hours and found significant DNA double strand breaks in brain cells. When they gave rats naltrexone (a drug that blocks the body's natural opioids), it partially prevented the DNA damage. This suggests that microwave radiation triggers the body's opioid system, which then contributes to genetic damage in brain tissue.
Lai, H, Carino, MA, Singh, NP, · 1997
Researchers exposed rats to 2.45 GHz microwave radiation (the same frequency used in WiFi and microwave ovens) for 2 hours and found it caused DNA double strand breaks in brain cells. When they gave the rats naltrexone, a drug that blocks the body's natural opioids, it partially prevented this DNA damage. This suggests the body's own opioid system plays a role in how microwave radiation damages DNA in brain cells.
Lai, H, Singh, NP, · 1997
Researchers exposed rats to 2.45 GHz radiofrequency radiation (the same frequency used in microwave ovens and WiFi) for 2 hours and found it caused DNA strand breaks in brain cells. However, when they gave the rats either melatonin or a free radical scavenging compound before and after exposure, the DNA damage was completely blocked, suggesting that RF radiation damages DNA through free radical formation.
Cleary, SF, Cao, G, Liu, LM, Egle, PM, Shelton, KR · 1997
Researchers exposed human and hamster cells to radiofrequency radiation at levels 25 to 100 times higher than typical phone use for 2 hours, then looked for signs of cellular stress. They found no evidence that RF radiation triggered the production of stress proteins - molecules cells make when damaged or threatened. This suggests that at these exposure levels, the radiation didn't cause detectable cellular stress responses.
French PW, Donnellan M, McKenzie DR, · 1997
Researchers exposed human brain tumor cells (astrocytoma) to 835 MHz radiation-similar to early cell phone frequencies-for 20 minutes three times daily over a week. They found that lower power levels actually caused more biological effects than higher power levels, including reduced DNA synthesis and dramatic changes in cell shape. This counterintuitive finding suggests that weaker EMF signals may disrupt cellular communication pathways in ways that stronger signals do not.
Lai, H, Carino, MA, Singh, NP · 1997
Researchers exposed rats to microwave radiation at 2450 MHz (similar to WiFi frequencies) for 2 hours and found significant DNA damage in brain cells. When they gave the rats naltrexone, a drug that blocks the body's natural opioids, the DNA damage was partially prevented. This suggests that microwave radiation triggers the release of natural opioids in the brain, which then contributes to genetic damage.
Nakamura et al. · 1997
Scientists exposed pregnant and non-pregnant rats to microwave radiation at 2450 MHz for 90 minutes. Pregnant rats showed weakened immune systems and hormonal changes that didn't occur in non-pregnant rats, suggesting pregnancy increases vulnerability to wireless radiation from everyday devices.
Maes A, Collier M, Van Gorp U, Vandoninck S, Verschaeve L · 1997
Researchers exposed human blood cells to 935.2 MHz microwaves (the same frequency used by GSM cell phones) to test whether this radiation could damage DNA or chromosomes. They found no direct genetic damage from the microwaves alone, but discovered a very weak increase in DNA damage when cells were exposed to both microwaves and a known cancer-causing chemical called mitomycin C.
Malyapa RS et al. · 1997
Researchers exposed two types of cells (mouse and human) to cell phone radiation at frequencies used by mobile phones (835-847 MHz) for up to 24 hours to see if it caused DNA damage. They found no DNA damage in either cell type when exposed at a specific absorption rate (SAR) of 0.6 W/kg, which is below current regulatory limits. This suggests that cell phone radiation at this level may not directly break DNA strands in laboratory conditions.
Antonopoulos A, Eisenbrandt H, Obe G, · 1997
Researchers exposed human immune cells (lymphocytes) to electromagnetic fields at frequencies used by cell phones and other wireless devices (380, 900, and 1800 MHz) to see if the radiation would damage the cells' DNA or disrupt their normal growth cycle. The study found no measurable differences between cells exposed to EMF and unexposed control cells. This suggests that these specific frequencies, under the conditions tested, did not cause detectable genetic damage or cellular disruption in immune cells.
Cain CD, Thomas DL, Adey WR · 1997
Researchers exposed mouse cells to cell phone-like radiation (836.55 MHz TDMA signals) for 28 days to see if it would enhance cancer cell formation when combined with a known tumor-promoting chemical. The radiation exposure at levels similar to cell phone use did not increase cancer cell formation compared to unexposed cells. This suggests that this type of radiofrequency exposure does not act as a tumor promoter in laboratory cell cultures.
Lai H, Singh NP · 1996
Researchers exposed rats to radiofrequency radiation at 2450 MHz (similar to microwave oven frequencies) for 2 hours and found significant DNA damage in brain cells 4 hours later. Both single-strand and double-strand DNA breaks increased after exposure to radiation levels producing a whole-body SAR of 1.2 W/kg. This suggests that RF radiation can directly damage genetic material in brain tissue or impair the brain's ability to repair DNA damage.
Lai H, Singh NP · 1996
Researchers exposed rats to 2450 MHz radiofrequency radiation for two hours and found significant DNA damage in brain cells four hours later. The study suggests RF radiation at these levels can break genetic material in brain cells, potentially affecting cellular repair mechanisms.
Irnich W, Batz L, Muller R, Tobisch R · 1996
German researchers tested 231 pacemaker models from 20 manufacturers to see if mobile phones interfere with their function. They found that about one-third of pacemakers experienced interference from certain phone frequencies, but simple precautions like keeping phones 20 cm away from the chest completely prevented problems. The study concluded that while interference is possible, it's easily avoided and affects very few patients in real-world conditions.