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.
Preece AW, Georgiou AG, Dunn EJ, Farrow S · 2007
Researchers studied residents living near powerful military radio transmitters in Cyprus to investigate health complaints. They found that people living in exposed villages reported 2.7 to 3.7 times more headaches, migraines, and dizziness compared to unexposed residents, but no increase in cancer or birth defects. The researchers suggested these symptoms were more likely caused by noise from military aircraft or psychological stress from seeing the antennas rather than the radio waves themselves.
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.
Unknown authors · 2007
Italian researchers exposed human brain cancer cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the same frequency as European power lines) and found significantly increased production of beta-amyloid peptide, a toxic protein that accumulates in Alzheimer's disease. The overnight exposure at 3.1 millitesla didn't kill the cells but stimulated them to produce more of the harmful protein linked to dementia.
Del Giudice E et al. · 2007
Italian researchers exposed human brain cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields from power lines and found significantly increased production of beta-amyloid proteins, the toxic clumps linked to Alzheimer's disease. This laboratory finding suggests a potential biological mechanism connecting household electricity exposure to Alzheimer's risk.
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.
Chauhan V et al. · 2007
Canadian researchers exposed two types of human cells to 1.9 GHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone signals) for up to 24 hours at power levels ranging from very low to high. They found no changes in gene expression - meaning the RF exposure didn't turn genes on or off differently than unexposed cells. However, when they heated the same cells to 43°C (109°F) for comparison, multiple heat-shock genes activated as expected.
Unknown authors · 2007
Researchers exposed human skin cells to 60 Hz electromagnetic fields (like those from power lines) combined with a cancer drug called bleomycin. The EMF exposure made the drug more toxic to cells and increased chromosome damage. While EMF alone didn't harm cells, it amplified the harmful effects of the chemical treatment.
Ning W, Xu SJ, Chiang H, Xu ZP, Zhou SY, Yang W, Luo JH · 2007
Researchers exposed developing rat brain cells to cell phone radiation and found that higher exposure levels (2.4 W/kg) significantly reduced the formation of dendritic spines, which are essential for brain cell communication, suggesting potential interference with normal brain development during critical growth periods.
Ning W, Xu SJ, Chiang H, Xu ZP, Zhou SY, Yang W, Luo JH · 2007
Researchers exposed developing rat brain cells (hippocampal neurons) to cell phone radiation at 1800 MHz for 15 minutes daily over 8 days. At the higher exposure level (2.4 W/kg), the radiation significantly disrupted normal brain cell development, reducing the formation of dendrites (the branch-like structures neurons use to communicate) and synapses (connection points between neurons). This suggests cell phone radiation during critical developmental periods could interfere with normal brain formation.
Carrubba S, Frilot C, Chesson AL, Marino AA. · 2007
Researchers exposed eight people to weak 60 Hz magnetic fields (1 gauss) for 2 seconds and measured their brain activity using specialized electrodes. They discovered that human brains can detect these low-level magnetic fields and respond in complex, nonlinear ways that standard testing methods miss. This suggests humans may have an evolutionary magnetic sensing ability that makes us vulnerable to artificial electromagnetic fields in our environment.
Unknown authors · 2007
This 2007 study tested how well people claiming electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS) could actually detect electrical currents at 50 Hz power line frequency. Researchers found that EHS groups varied dramatically depending on how they were recruited, with many showing no greater electrical sensitivity than the general population.
Masuda H et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed rats to cell phone frequency radiation (1,439 MHz) for 10 minutes at three different power levels to see if it affected blood flow and the blood-brain barrier in their brains. They found no changes in any of the brain circulation measurements, including blood vessel size, blood flow speed, and whether the protective blood-brain barrier became more permeable. This suggests that short-term exposure to this type of radiofrequency radiation did not disrupt normal brain blood circulation.
Unknown authors · 2007
UK health officials analyzed the scientific evidence linking power line magnetic fields to childhood leukemia and concluded that low-cost precautionary measures are justified despite scientific uncertainty. Using established criteria for evaluating health risks, they found that while the evidence isn't definitive, the consistent association across multiple studies warrants protective action.
Cinel C, Boldini A, Russo R, Fox E · 2007
Researchers tested whether 40 minutes of mobile phone radiation affects hearing ability by having 168 people perform an auditory task while exposed to phone signals at two different power levels. The study found no significant changes in hearing performance during radiation exposure compared to sham (fake) exposure. This suggests that short-term mobile phone use doesn't impair basic auditory processing abilities.
Saran A et al. · 2007
Researchers exposed newborn mice genetically engineered to be highly susceptible to tumors to cell phone radiation (900 MHz GSM) for 30 minutes twice daily over 5 days. The exposed mice showed no increased cancer risk, no shortened lifespan, and no acceleration of tumor development compared to unexposed mice. This study suggests that brief early-life exposure to cell phone radiation at typical levels may not promote cancer development, even in genetically vulnerable subjects.
Trigano A, Blandeau O, Dale C, Wong MF, Wiart J. · 2007
Researchers tested whether cell phones interfere with implantable loop recorders (ILRs), small heart monitoring devices that track irregular rhythms. When phones were placed just 1 cm away from the devices and calls were made, 88% of tests showed electrical interference that created false signals on heart rhythm recordings. While the interference didn't permanently damage the devices, it could potentially mask real heart problems or create false alarms.