Unknown authors · 2010
Researchers exposed 60 male rats to 50 Hz electric fields (the same frequency as household power lines) for either 10 or 30 days, then measured cholesterol and triglyceride levels in their blood. Both exposure groups showed significantly lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels compared to unexposed controls, with longer exposure producing greater decreases. This suggests power line frequency electric fields may alter fat metabolism in mammals.
Unknown authors · 2010
Researchers exposed rats to 50 Hz electric fields (the same frequency as power lines) for either 10 or 30 days and measured cholesterol and triglyceride levels in their blood. Both exposure groups showed significantly lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels compared to unexposed controls, with longer exposure producing greater decreases. This suggests that power line frequency electric fields can alter fat metabolism in mammals.
Grigor'ev IuG et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed rats to WiFi-frequency radiation (2450 MHz) for 7 hours daily over 30 days at non-heating levels. They found clear signs of oxidative stress in blood, indicating cellular damage from harmful free radicals. This suggests low-level microwave exposure can damage cells without heating tissue.
Unknown authors · 2010
Turkish researchers exposed rats to extremely low-frequency magnetic fields at levels considered safe for public and occupational exposure for 10 months. They found that the higher exposure level (500 μT) significantly decreased calcium, zinc, and magnesium levels in rib bones, suggesting long-term EMF exposure may affect bone mineral content and metabolism.
Unknown authors · 2010
Polish researchers exposed liver fluke eggs to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for 10 days, finding the eggs hatched faster than normal. When snails were infected with these EMF-exposed parasites, they produced fewer offspring and died at higher rates, suggesting electromagnetic fields can alter parasite biology in ways that affect host survival.
Unknown authors · 2010
Researchers exposed two types of immune cells to 60 Hz magnetic fields at levels 2.4 times higher than occupational limits for up to 16 hours. The study found no changes in phospholipase enzymes, which are crucial for cell membrane signaling and inflammation responses.
Ciejka E, Skibska B, Kleniewska P, Goraca A. · 2010
Polish researchers exposed rats to 40 Hz magnetic fields (the type used in medical magnetotherapy) for either 30 or 60 minutes daily over two weeks. They found significant biochemical changes in muscle tissue, including increased sulfur compounds and altered protein levels, indicating the magnetic fields triggered oxidative stress. This suggests that even therapeutic magnetic field devices can cause measurable cellular damage in muscle tissue.
Carrubba S, Frilot C 2nd, Chesson AL Jr, Marino AA · 2010
Researchers exposed 20 volunteers to mobile phone pulses (217 Hz frequency) while monitoring brain activity. Advanced analysis detected measurable brain responses in 90% of participants, suggesting mobile phones create detectable changes in brain function that standard testing methods miss.
Cuccurazzu B et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed mice to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (power line frequency) for up to seven hours daily over one week. The exposure significantly increased new brain cell growth in the hippocampus, the brain region responsible for memory formation, suggesting certain EMF exposures may enhance rather than harm brain function.
Kumar S, Jain S, Behari J, Avelev VD, Mathur R. · 2010
Researchers exposed paralyzed rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields for two hours daily over eight weeks. The treatment restored normal eating, drinking, and weight gain that had been disrupted by spinal cord injuries, suggesting magnetic field therapy might help certain neurological conditions.
Szemerszky R, Zelena D, Barna I, Bárdos G. · 2010
Researchers exposed rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the type from power lines) for either 5 days or 4-6 weeks to study stress effects. They found that long-term exposure led to depression-like behavior, elevated stress hormones, and higher blood glucose levels, while short-term exposure showed no effects. This suggests that chronic exposure to magnetic fields may act as a mild stressor that could contribute to depression and metabolic problems.
Frahm J, Mattsson MO, Simkó M. · 2010
Researchers exposed mouse immune cells to 50 Hz magnetic fields and found the exposure triggered cellular stress responses and increased harmful molecules called reactive oxygen species. This suggests magnetic fields can activate immune cells and disrupt normal cellular processes even without killing cells.
Garip AI, Akan Z. · 2010
Scientists exposed human blood cancer cells to electromagnetic fields from power lines for three hours. The fields protected healthy cells from dying but increased cell death in already-stressed cells. This shows that EMF effects depend on the cell's existing health condition.
Lee HM et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed human spinal disc cells to 60 Hz magnetic fields at 1.8 millitesla for 72 hours to see how electromagnetic fields affect cell growth. They found that the magnetic fields stimulated DNA synthesis and increased cell proliferation without causing cell damage. This suggests that specific EMF exposures might have therapeutic potential for treating degenerative disc disease by promoting healthy cell growth.
Mannerling AC, Simkó M, Mild KH, Mattsson MO · 2010
Researchers exposed human blood cells to 50-Hz magnetic fields at household appliance levels for one hour. The exposure doubled stress protein production and increased harmful oxygen radicals by 30-40%, indicating cellular damage at magnetic field strengths commonly found near home electronics.
Morabito C et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed muscle cells to extremely low frequency electromagnetic fields (the type from power lines and household wiring) for short periods and measured cellular stress responses. The EMFs triggered increased production of harmful reactive oxygen species, disrupted the cells' energy-producing mitochondria, and altered calcium levels that control muscle function. These changes suggest that even brief EMF exposure can disrupt fundamental cellular processes in muscle tissue.
Cuccurazzu B et al. · 2010
Italian researchers exposed mice to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (European power line frequency) for up to seven hours daily over one week. This significantly increased new brain cell growth in the hippocampus, improving long-term memory formation and suggesting potential therapeutic applications for brain regenerative medicine.
Szemerszky R, Zelena D, Barna I, Bárdos G. · 2010
Researchers exposed rats to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (household electrical frequency) for weeks and found increased blood sugar, stress hormones, and depression-like behavior compared to short-term exposure. This suggests chronic EMF exposure may act as a mild stressor affecting mood and metabolism.
Volkow ND et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed 15 healthy people to pulsed magnetic fields (920 Hz) while measuring brain glucose metabolism using PET scans. They found that areas of the brain exposed to stronger electric fields showed decreased metabolic activity compared to unexposed areas. The stronger the field, the greater the reduction in brain metabolism, suggesting that electromagnetic fields can directly alter brain function.
Jorge-Mora T et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed rats to WiFi-frequency radiation for 30 minutes and found increased heat shock proteins in brain regions controlling hormones and sensory processing. These proteins indicate cellular stress, with effects lasting 24 hours, suggesting brief microwave exposure triggers brain stress responses.
Markkanen A, Naarala J, Juutilainen J · 2010
Finnish researchers tested whether 50 Hz magnetic fields (the type from power lines) could amplify DNA damage from UV radiation in mouse cells. They exposed cells to magnetic fields of 100-300 microTesla during or before UV exposure and measured cellular oxidative stress. The study found no evidence that magnetic fields increased UV-induced damage, contradicting their hypothesis about how magnetic fields might affect cellular chemistry.
Lu ST et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed four rhesus monkeys to intense 2.8 GHz microwave radiation for 36 hours total over three weeks and measured any damage to the corneal endothelium (the inner layer of cells in the eye's cornea). The study found no changes in corneal cell density or thickness, even at power levels more than ten times higher than previous studies that reported eye damage. This suggests that microwave exposure at these levels may not harm this specific part of the eye.
Parazzini M et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed 73 healthy adults to 3G cell phone radiation (UMTS) at 1.75 W/kg SAR for 20 minutes and tested their hearing function before and after exposure. They found no measurable effects on hearing thresholds, inner ear function, or brain responses to sound. This suggests that short-term exposure to 3G radiation at levels similar to heavy phone use doesn't immediately damage the auditory system.
Takahashi S et al. · 2010
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2.14 GHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell tower signals) for 20 hours daily throughout pregnancy and nursing. They found no harmful effects on the mothers, their offspring, or the next generation, examining everything from growth and development to memory and reproductive function. This suggests that exposure levels similar to those from cell towers may not cause developmental problems in mammals.
Unknown authors · 2010
Researchers exposed 120 mice to power line frequency magnetic fields (50 Hz) at various intensities for 40 days to test for genetic damage. While some cellular changes occurred, the study found no evidence of DNA damage or harmful genetic effects from exposures up to 5 microT. The authors concluded these magnetic field levels do not cause genotoxic effects.