Haarala C et al. · 2007
Finnish researchers tested whether mobile phone radiation affects thinking skills by having 36 men perform cognitive tasks while exposed to different types of phone signals on either the left or right side of their heads. They found no measurable differences in mental performance between real phone radiation exposure and fake exposure, regardless of which side of the head was exposed. The study suggests that typical mobile phone use doesn't impair basic cognitive functions like memory or attention in healthy adults.
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.
Dimbylow P. · 2007
Researchers created detailed computer models of pregnant women at different stages of pregnancy (8 to 38 weeks) to measure how radiofrequency radiation is absorbed by both the mother and developing baby. They found that current safety guidelines appear to provide adequate protection for the fetus, with radiation absorption levels staying within established limits across all pregnancy stages tested.
Oberto G et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed genetically modified mice to pulsed 900 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone signals) for 18 months to test whether it could cause cancer. Despite using exposure levels up to three times higher than a previous study that found increased lymphomas, this larger study found no increase in tumors or cancer at any of the tested exposure levels. This contradicts earlier research suggesting cell phone radiation might promote cancer development.
Parazzini M et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed 26 healthy people to cell phone radiation at 900 MHz and measured heart rate variability (how consistently the heart beats). They found subtle changes in heart rhythm patterns, especially when participants stood up, suggesting cell phone signals may affect the nervous system's control of the heart.
Parazzini M et al. · 2007
Italian researchers exposed 26 healthy young adults to cell phone radiation at 900 MHz (2 watts) while measuring heart rate variability, which reflects how well the autonomic nervous system regulates heart rhythm. The study found no statistically significant effects on heart rate patterns during either rest or physical stress, though some minor changes were detected in a few measurements. This suggests that short-term cell phone exposure at typical power levels doesn't meaningfully disrupt the body's automatic control of heart function.
Zeni et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed mouse cells to 900 MHz cell phone radiation for up to 30 minutes to test whether it creates harmful molecules called reactive oxygen species. The radiation did not increase these damaging molecules at any exposure level tested, suggesting no immediate cellular harm.
Zeni O et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed mouse cells to 900 MHz cell phone radiation for up to 30 minutes to test whether it creates harmful reactive oxygen species that damage cells. The study found no increase in these damaging molecules from RF exposure alone, suggesting this frequency may not cause oxidative cellular stress.
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.
Stefanics G et al. · 2007
Researchers tested whether 10 minutes of cell phone radiation affects how quickly the brain processes sound by measuring auditory brainstem responses (electrical signals from the hearing pathway to the brain) in 30 healthy young adults. They found no measurable changes in brain response timing after exposure to 900 MHz radiation from a Nokia phone at typical usage levels. This suggests short-term phone calls don't immediately disrupt the brain's basic hearing functions.
Stefanics G et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed 30 healthy young adults to 10 minutes of 900 MHz radiation from a Nokia cell phone and measured their auditory brainstem response (ABR), which tracks how sound signals travel from the ear to the brain. They found no immediate changes in ABR timing compared to sham exposure. This suggests short-term cell phone use doesn't immediately disrupt the basic hearing pathway in the brainstem.
Unknown authors · 2007
Researchers exposed brain cells to 872 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to older cell phone frequencies) and found that primary astrocytes showed significant decreases in ornithine decarboxylase activity, an enzyme important for cell growth and function. Interestingly, laboratory-grown cell lines showed no effects, suggesting that primary brain cells may be more vulnerable to RF radiation than commonly used research models.
Unknown authors · 2007
Finnish researchers exposed brain cells to 872 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone frequencies) and found that a key enzyme called ornithine decarboxylase was significantly reduced in primary astrocytes (natural brain cells). Importantly, this effect didn't occur in laboratory-grown cell lines, suggesting that natural brain cells may be more vulnerable to RF radiation than artificial cell cultures used in many studies.
Hirose H et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed human brain and lung cells to cell phone tower radiation at levels up to 10 times higher than public safety limits to test whether it triggers heat shock proteins (cellular stress markers). After continuous exposure for up to 48 hours, they found no increase in these stress proteins compared to unexposed cells. This suggests that cell phone tower radiation at these levels doesn't cause detectable cellular stress responses.
Hirose H et al. · 2007
Japanese researchers exposed human brain and lung cells to radiofrequency radiation at levels similar to cell tower emissions (2.1 GHz) for up to 48 hours. They found no changes in heat shock proteins (cellular stress markers that increase when cells are damaged) even at exposure levels 10 times higher than public safety limits. This suggests that cell tower-level RF radiation does not trigger detectable cellular stress responses in laboratory conditions.
Unknown authors · 2007
Researchers investigated the unusual phenomenon where humans and animals can actually hear pulsed microwave radiation, despite electromagnetic waves normally being invisible and silent. The study found that microwave pulses create tiny heat expansions in head tissues that generate sound waves, which travel through bone to the inner ear where they're perceived as clicks or buzzing sounds. This effect occurs with frequencies from hundreds of MHz to tens of GHz, including those used by wireless devices and MRI machines.
Unknown authors · 2007
This 2007 study explains how humans and animals can actually hear microwave pulses, a phenomenon where electromagnetic waves create audible sounds inside the head. The research shows that pulsed microwaves heat tissue, creating pressure waves that travel through bone to the inner ear, where they're perceived as clicking or buzzing sounds. This finding has important implications for understanding exposure to wireless devices and MRI equipment.
Platano D et al. · 2007
Italian researchers exposed rat brain cells to 900 MHz radiofrequency radiation (the same frequency used by GSM cell phones) to see if it affected calcium channels, which are crucial for brain cell communication. After exposing the cells to radiation at 2 W/kg for short periods, they found no changes in how calcium moved through these channels. This suggests that brief exposure to cell phone-level radiation may not immediately disrupt this particular aspect of brain cell function.
Platano D et al. · 2007
Italian researchers exposed rat brain cells to 900 MHz radiofrequency radiation (the same frequency used by GSM cell phones) for short periods to see if it affected calcium channels, which are crucial for nerve cell communication. They found no changes in how calcium moved through these channels, even at radiation levels of 2 W/kg. This suggests that brief cell phone-level exposures may not immediately disrupt this particular aspect of brain cell function.
Shirai T et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed young rats to cell phone-like radiation (1.95 GHz W-CDMA signals) for 2 years to see if it would promote brain tumor development in animals already given a cancer-causing chemical. The study found no significant increase in brain tumors from the radiation exposure at levels of 0.67 and 2.0 W/kg SAR. This suggests that chronic exposure to this type of cell phone radiation does not accelerate brain tumor formation in this animal model.
Juutilainen J, Heikkinen P, Soikkeli H, Mäki-Paakkanen J. · 2007
Finnish researchers exposed mice to cell phone radiation for over a year to test whether it damages DNA by looking for micronuclei (broken chromosome fragments) in blood cells. They found no DNA damage from radiofrequency exposure at levels similar to what humans experience from mobile phones. This was true across different phone technologies (analog and digital), exposure durations (52-78 weeks), and mouse strains.
Unknown authors · 2007
Researchers tested 84 healthy young adults to see if they could consciously detect GSM cell phone radiation (902 MHz) in controlled laboratory conditions. Despite financial incentives for good performance, participants performed no better than random guessing, providing evidence against electromagnetic sensitivity to mobile phone fields.
Chauhan V et al. · 2007
Canadian government researchers exposed three types of human cells to 1.9 GHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone signals) for 6 hours at power levels up to 10 W/kg. They measured multiple indicators of cellular stress including cell death, DNA damage, immune responses, and cell cycle disruption. The study found no detectable biological effects from the RF exposure at any power level tested.
Sanchez et al. · 2007
French researchers exposed human skin cells to GSM cell phone signals at the maximum allowed exposure level for 48 hours, looking for signs of cellular stress like those caused by heat or UV radiation. They found no evidence that the radiofrequency radiation caused stress responses or cell death, unlike the positive control treatments that clearly damaged cells. This suggests that cell phone radiation at current safety limits may not directly harm skin cells in laboratory conditions.
Tahvanainen K et al. · 2007
Finnish researchers measured ear canal temperature in 30 people during 35-minute cell phone calls using both 900 MHz and 1800 MHz phones. They found that ear temperatures increased by more than 1 degree Celsius during phone use compared to sham exposure, with the warming effect persisting even after the call ended. The researchers concluded this heating came from the phone's battery warming up during maximum power use, not from the radiofrequency fields themselves.