Unknown authors · 2010
Turkish researchers exposed 120 mice to 50 Hz magnetic fields at various intensities (1-5 microTesla) for 40 days to test for genetic damage. They found no significant genotoxic effects, though some cellular changes occurred at higher exposure levels. The study concluded that power line frequency magnetic fields at these intensities don't cause genetic damage in mice.
Unknown authors · 2010
Russian researchers exposed rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (WiFi frequency) at low levels for 30 days and found evidence of autoimmune reactions and oxidative stress. The exposed rats developed antibodies against their own cellular components, indicating their immune systems were attacking healthy tissue. This suggests chronic low-level EMF exposure may trigger harmful immune responses.
Unknown authors · 2010
Turkish researchers exposed 120 mice to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) at various strengths for 40 days, testing for genetic damage. They found no significant genotoxic effects at field strengths up to 5 microTesla, though some cellular changes occurred at higher intensities. The study suggests low-level power frequency magnetic fields may not cause DNA damage in blood cells.
Peyman A, Gabriel C, Grant EH, Vermeeren G, Martens L · 2009
Researchers measured how tissue properties change with age in pigs and used this data to calculate radiation absorption (SAR) in children using walkie-talkies. They found that while tissue properties do change significantly with age - mainly due to decreasing water content - these changes don't meaningfully affect how much radiation children absorb compared to adults when using walkie-talkie devices.
Di Loreto S et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed rat brain cells to 50 Hz magnetic fields and found the exposure improved cell survival and reduced cell death. The magnetic fields also triggered protective antioxidant responses and increased production of proteins that support brain health, suggesting potential protective effects.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed human stem cells and regular cells to GSM and UMTS mobile phone frequencies, finding that the radiation significantly disrupted DNA repair processes. Stem cells showed much stronger negative effects than mature cells, with impaired ability to form protective repair proteins at DNA damage sites. This suggests stem cells may be particularly vulnerable to mobile phone radiation, potentially increasing cancer risk.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed human stem cells and mature cells to cell phone radiation at frequencies used by GSM (915 MHz) and UMTS (1947.4 MHz) networks. They found that radiation disrupted DNA repair processes more severely in stem cells than in mature cells, with stem cells showing impaired formation of proteins needed to fix DNA breaks. This matters because stem cells are particularly important for cancer development, and the study suggests they may be more vulnerable to cell phone radiation damage.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed mice with Ehrlich ascites carcinoma to extremely weak magnetic fields (1-16.5 Hz frequencies at 100-300 nanotesla intensity) combined with a static field of 42 microtesla. The treatment dramatically reduced tumor growth, with tumor tissue becoming practically absent in treated mice while control animals showed extensive cancer spread. Importantly, the same magnetic field exposure caused no harmful effects in healthy mice.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed mice with Ehrlich ascites carcinoma to extremely weak magnetic fields (as low as 100-300 nT at frequencies of 1, 4.4, and 16.5 Hz) combined with a static field of 42 µT. The treatment dramatically inhibited tumor growth, with tumor tissue practically absent in treated mice while control mice showed extensive cancer spread. Healthy mice showed no adverse effects from the same magnetic field exposure.
Reba Goodman et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed flatworms (planaria) to 60 Hz magnetic fields at 80 milliGauss for one hour twice daily during regeneration after being cut in half. The EMF-exposed worms regenerated faster than unexposed controls, with tail portions growing eyes 48 hours earlier and showing increased levels of stress proteins typically associated with healing and repair processes.
Sommer et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed mice to cell phone radiation (UMTS signals at 1966 MHz) continuously for their entire lives across four generations to study effects on reproduction and development. They found no harmful effects on fertility, pup development, or reproductive health, even at exposure levels up to 1.3 W/kg SAR. The only minor finding was some changes in food consumption patterns without a clear dose-response relationship.
Furubayashi T et al. · 2009
Japanese researchers exposed 54 women to cell tower-like radio waves for 30 minutes to test whether people who report mobile phone sensitivity can actually detect electromagnetic fields. They found that sensitive individuals couldn't tell when they were being exposed any better than control subjects, but they consistently reported more discomfort regardless of whether the EMF was on or off. This suggests that electromagnetic hypersensitivity symptoms aren't directly caused by the radio waves themselves.
Furubayashi T et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 54 women (including 11 with self-reported electromagnetic hypersensitivity) to cell tower radiation at 10 V/m for 30 minutes in a controlled lab setting. Neither group could detect when they were actually being exposed to EMF, and both groups showed identical biological responses whether exposed to real or fake radiation. The study found no evidence that people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity react differently to cell tower emissions than healthy controls.
Naziroğlu M, Gümral N. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to WiFi-frequency radiation (2.45 GHz) for one hour daily over four weeks. The radiation significantly reduced protective antioxidant vitamins A, C, and E in brain tissue. This suggests wireless devices may deplete the brain's natural defenses against cellular damage.
Naziroğlu M, Gümral N. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to 2.45 GHz radiation (the same frequency used in WiFi and microwaves) for one hour daily over 28 days and found it depleted protective antioxidant vitamins in brain tissue. When rats were given selenium or L-carnitine supplements, these nutrients helped protect against the radiation-induced vitamin depletion. This suggests that WiFi-frequency radiation creates oxidative stress in the brain that may be partially countered by certain antioxidant supplements.
Naziroğlu M, Gümral N · 2009
Turkish researchers exposed rats to WiFi-frequency radiation (2.45 GHz) for one hour daily over 28 days and found it depleted key brain antioxidants including vitamins A, C, and E. When rats were given selenium or L-carnitine supplements during exposure, these protective nutrients were largely restored, with L-carnitine showing stronger protective effects. This suggests that wireless device radiation creates oxidative stress in brain tissue, but certain antioxidants may help counteract this damage.
Cook CM, Saucier DM, Thomas AW, Prato FS. · 2009
Researchers exposed 32 people to weak pulsed magnetic fields (the type generated by power lines and electrical devices) for 15 minutes while measuring their brain waves. They found that different pulse patterns altered alpha brain wave activity in the back regions of the brain within just 5 minutes of exposure. The changes persisted even after exposure ended, suggesting that these everyday magnetic fields can measurably affect brain function.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed rabbit sperm to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) and found significant decreases in sperm movement and fertility rates. When female rabbits were artificially inseminated with the exposed sperm, pregnancy rates dropped to 54% compared to normal controls at 76%.
Ogawa K et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to cell phone radiation (1.95-GHz W-CDMA signals) for 90 minutes daily during the critical period of fetal development (days 7-17 of pregnancy). They found no harmful effects on pregnancy outcomes, fetal development, or birth defects at exposure levels up to 2.0 W/kg brain SAR. This suggests that typical cell phone radiation exposure during pregnancy may not cause developmental problems in offspring.
Ogawa K et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to cell phone radiation (1.95-GHz signals) for 90 minutes daily during pregnancy to see if it would harm developing babies. They tested different exposure levels, including some higher than typical cell phone use, and found no effects on pregnancy outcomes, fetal development, or birth defects. The study suggests that cell phone radiation at these levels doesn't appear to cause developmental problems during pregnancy.
Eltiti S et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 88 people (including those who claimed to be sensitive to electromagnetic fields) to cell tower signals for 50 minutes while they performed memory and attention tests. The study found no effects on cognitive performance or physiological measures like heart rate and skin conductance in either sensitive or control participants. This suggests that short-term exposure to typical cell tower radiation levels doesn't impair brain function or cause detectable physical responses.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed cancer cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for up to 72 hours and found the fields increased protein damage and accelerated cell growth. The EMF exposure triggered more free radical production, forcing cellular cleanup systems to work harder to remove damaged proteins.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed bone cells and blood vessel cells to 15 Hz pulsed electromagnetic fields for 8 hours and found the fields dramatically increased cell growth. When bone cells were exposed to EMF, they released unknown chemical signals that made blood vessel cells multiply 54 times faster than normal. This suggests electromagnetic fields can trigger powerful biological responses through indirect cellular communication pathways.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed bone-forming cells (osteoblasts) and blood vessel cells (endothelial cells) to low-frequency pulsed electromagnetic fields at 15 Hz frequency for 8 hours. They discovered that EMF exposure caused osteoblasts to release unknown chemical signals that dramatically increased blood vessel cell growth by 54-fold. This suggests electromagnetic fields may promote healing by enhancing communication between different cell types.
Unknown authors · 2009
Researchers exposed cancer cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for up to 72 hours and found the EMF increased protein damage and activated cellular cleanup systems. The study showed that power line frequency EMF creates oxidative stress in cells, similar to free radical damage from other sources.