Riddervold IS et al. · 2008
Danish researchers exposed 80 people (teenagers and adults) to cell tower radiation at 2.14 GHz for 45 minutes to test whether it affected their thinking abilities and caused symptoms. They found no significant impact on cognitive performance, though participants reported slightly more headaches during exposure compared to fake exposure sessions. The study suggests cell tower radiation at these levels doesn't impair mental function in the short term.
Riddervold IS et al. · 2008
Danish researchers tested whether 45-minute exposures to UMTS cell tower radiation (2140 MHz) affected cognitive performance and symptoms in 40 teenagers and 40 adults. They found no significant differences in cognitive test performance between real and sham exposures, though participants reported slightly more headaches during radiation exposure, which may have been due to baseline differences rather than the radiation itself.
Lerchl A et al. · 2008
German researchers exposed hamsters to cell phone radiation 24 hours a day for 60 days at levels matching the maximum allowed for humans. While melatonin levels (the sleep hormone) remained unchanged, hamsters exposed to certain frequencies gained up to 6% more body weight than unexposed animals, suggesting the radiation may affect metabolism even at supposedly safe levels.
Rao VS et al. · 2008
Mouse brain cells exposed to cell phone-like radiofrequency radiation showed dramatically altered calcium signaling, with three times more calcium spikes than unexposed cells. This matters because calcium controls critical brain cell functions including growth, development, and communication between neurons.
Mazor R et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed human blood cells to 800 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone frequencies) for 72 hours at power levels close to current safety limits. They found significant increases in chromosome damage called aneuploidy, where cells gained or lost whole chromosomes. Importantly, this damage occurred even when temperature was carefully controlled, suggesting the radiation itself caused genetic harm through non-thermal mechanisms.
Fu Y, Wang C, Wang J, Lei Y, Ma Y. · 2008
Chinese researchers exposed mice to extremely low-frequency magnetic fields (the same type emitted by power lines and household appliances) for either 7 or 25 days, then tested their spatial memory using a maze. While short-term exposure had no effect, mice exposed to 50 Hz fields for 25 days showed impaired ability to recognize new areas in the maze. This suggests that chronic exposure to power-frequency magnetic fields may interfere with spatial memory and navigation abilities.
Devrim E et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed female rats to 900 MHz electromagnetic radiation (the frequency used by cell phones) for four weeks and measured oxidative stress markers in blood cells and organs. The EMF exposure increased oxidative stress and tissue damage in red blood cells and kidneys, while vitamin C provided some protection against these effects. This suggests that cell phone radiation may cause cellular damage through oxidative stress pathways.
Kim JY et al. · 2008
Korean researchers exposed mammalian cells to 835-MHz radiofrequency radiation (the frequency used in Korean CDMA cell phones) to test whether it causes genetic damage. While the radiation alone didn't directly damage DNA or chromosomes, it amplified the genetic damage when cells were also exposed to known cancer-causing chemicals. The researchers concluded they couldn't rule out increased genetic damage risk from this cell phone frequency.
Stovner LJ, Oftedal G, Straume A, Johnsson A. · 2008
Norwegian researchers exposed 17 people to cell phone radiation (902.4 MHz) for 30 minutes to see if it caused headaches, comparing real exposure to fake exposure sessions. They found no difference in headache patterns between real and fake exposures, with most headaches being typical tension headaches. The study suggests that headaches people blame on cell phones are likely caused by psychological expectations (the nocebo effect) rather than the radio waves themselves.
Lee KS, Choi JS, Hong SY, Son TH, Yu K. · 2008
Researchers exposed fruit flies to cell phone radiation at two different intensities to see how it affected their survival and cellular responses. At the current safety limit (1.6 W/kg), most flies survived 30 hours of exposure, but at higher levels (4.0 W/kg), flies began dying after 12 hours. The radiation triggered different cellular stress pathways depending on the intensity, with higher levels causing brain cell death.
George I et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low frequency magnetic fields (60 Hz at 8 microTesla) for 30 minutes before inducing heart attacks, then measured heart function recovery. The electromagnetic field exposure triggered production of a protective protein called HSP70, which significantly improved the heart's ability to recover from oxygen deprivation. This suggests that certain EMF exposures might actually help protect heart tissue from damage during cardiac events.
Nittby H et al. · 2008
Swedish researchers exposed rats to cell phone radiation at 1,800 MHz for 6 hours and analyzed gene activity in brain regions critical for memory and thinking. The radiation significantly altered the expression of hundreds of genes, particularly those involved in cell membrane functions and cellular communication. This suggests that even brief exposure to mobile phone radiation can trigger measurable biological changes in brain tissue at the genetic level.
Nittby H et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed rats to cell phone radiation at 1,800 MHz for 6 hours and found significant changes in brain gene activity. The genetic alterations affected genes controlling cell membranes and cellular communication in the cortex and hippocampus, the same brain regions where previous studies documented blood-brain barrier damage.
Ammari M et al. · 2008
French researchers exposed rats to 900-MHz cell phone radiation for up to 24 weeks to test whether it would impair their spatial memory and navigation abilities. The rats showed no memory deficits even when exposed to radiation levels 3-12 times higher than typical cell phone use. This suggests that chronic exposure to GSM cell phone signals may not directly damage the brain's memory systems.
Ammari M et al. · 2008
French researchers exposed rats to 900 MHz cell phone radiation (the same frequency used by GSM phones) for either 8 or 24 weeks, then tested their spatial memory using a maze. The rats showed no memory problems compared to unexposed rats, even at radiation levels up to four times higher than current safety limits. This suggests that chronic cell phone radiation exposure may not impair spatial learning and memory functions in the brain.
Valbonesi P et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed human placental cells to cell phone radiation (1.8 GHz GSM signals) for one hour at levels twice the current safety limit to see if it would trigger cellular stress responses or DNA damage. The radiation exposure produced no detectable effects on stress proteins or DNA integrity, unlike positive control treatments that did cause measurable damage. This suggests that short-term exposure to this type of cell phone radiation may not immediately harm these particular cells.
Paparini A et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed mice to cell phone radiation at 1800 MHz (the frequency used by GSM phones) for one hour to see if it changed gene activity in their brains. Using advanced genetic analysis techniques, they found no significant changes in how genes were expressed in the brain tissue. This suggests that short-term exposure to this type of cell phone radiation at the levels tested does not trigger major changes in brain cell function at the genetic level.
Paparini A et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed mice to GSM cell phone radiation (1800 MHz) for one hour and analyzed gene expression changes in brain tissue using advanced genetic screening techniques. They found no significant changes in brain gene expression patterns, even when using less strict analysis methods that initially suggested 75 genes might be affected. This study suggests that short-term exposure to cell phone-level radiation may not cause major genetic changes in brain tissue.
Huang TQ, Lee MS, Oh E, Zhang BT, Seo JS, Park WY. · 2008
Researchers exposed immune system T-cells to cell phone radiation at 1763 MHz for 24 hours to see if it caused cellular damage or changes in gene activity. They found no significant effects on cell growth, DNA damage, or major gene expression changes, though two immune-related genes showed minor decreases. This suggests that 24-hour exposure to this specific frequency at high power levels did not cause detectable harm to these immune cells.
Curcio G et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed 24 people to cell phone radiation (902.40 MHz at 0.5 W/kg SAR) for three 15-minute sessions and tested their reaction times and finger coordination after each exposure. They found no statistically significant effects on these motor skills, though there was a slight trend toward faster reaction times. The study suggests that brief, repeated cell phone exposures don't appear to impair basic motor performance.
Curcio G et al. · 2008
Italian researchers exposed 24 people to GSM mobile phone radiation (902.40 MHz) for three separate 15-minute sessions and tested their reaction times and finger coordination after each exposure. They found no measurable effects on psychomotor performance, though there was a slight non-significant trend toward faster reaction times. The study suggests that brief, repeated mobile phone exposures at typical power levels don't impair basic motor skills and reflexes.
Unterlechner M, Sauter C, Schmid G, Zeitlhofer J · 2008
Researchers exposed 40 healthy adults to 3G mobile phone signals at 1.97 GHz for 90 minutes while testing their attention and reaction time through computer tasks. The study found no immediate effects on cognitive performance at exposure levels up to 0.63 W/kg SAR (specific absorption rate), which represents the amount of RF energy absorbed by brain tissue. This suggests that short-term exposure to 3G phone signals does not impair basic mental functions like attention and reaction speed.
Huang TQ et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed mouse auditory hair cells (the cells responsible for hearing) to cell phone radiation at 1763 MHz for up to 48 hours at extremely high power levels - 10 times stronger than typical phone use. They found no DNA damage, no changes in cell cycles, no stress responses, and only 29 out of 32,000 genes showed any change. The study suggests that even at these high exposure levels, cell phone radiation doesn't cause measurable biological damage to the specialized cells in our ears.
Manti L et al. · 2008
Italian researchers exposed human blood cells to cell phone radiation (1.95 GHz UMTS signal) for 24 hours, then hit them with X-rays to see if the RF exposure made the radiation damage worse. While the cell phone signals didn't increase the number of damaged cells, they did cause a small but measurable increase in the severity of chromosome damage within each affected cell at the higher exposure level (2.0 W/kg SAR). This suggests RF radiation might interfere with the cell's ability to repair DNA damage from other sources.
Yilmaz F, Dasdag S, Akdag MZ, Kilinc N · 2008
Turkish researchers exposed rats to radiation from 900 MHz cell phones for 20 minutes daily over one month to see if it affected bcl-2, a protein that helps prevent cell death in the brain and reproductive organs. They found no changes in bcl-2 levels in either brain or testicular tissue. This suggests that at least for this specific protein marker, short-term cell phone radiation exposure may not trigger cellular death pathways in these organs.