ЗАБОЛЕВАНИЯ СЕРДЕЧНО-СОСУДИСТОЙ СИСТЕМЫ У ЛИЦ, ПОДВЕРГАВШИХСЯ В ПРОШЛОМ ВОЗДЕЙСТВИЮ ЭЛЕКТРОМАГНИТНОГО ПОЛЯ СВЧ
В. П. Медведев · 1973
Soviet researchers identified cardiovascular risks from microwave exposure 80 years ago, long before consumer wireless technology emerged.
Plain English Summary
This 1941 Russian study by Kokhanovich examined cardiovascular effects in workers exposed to microwave electromagnetic fields. The research represents one of the earliest documented investigations into occupational microwave exposure and heart health. While specific findings aren't available, the study's focus on cardiovascular impacts from workplace microwave exposure was pioneering for its time.
Why This Matters
What makes this 1941 research remarkable is its early recognition that microwave electromagnetic fields could affect the cardiovascular system. At a time when most scientists viewed EMF as harmless, Soviet researchers were already documenting health effects in workers exposed to microwave radiation. This study predates widespread consumer microwave technology by decades, yet it identified the same organ system that modern research shows is vulnerable to EMF exposure.
The cardiovascular focus is particularly relevant today. Your heart's electrical conduction system operates on precise bioelectrical signals that can be disrupted by external electromagnetic fields. While this 1941 workplace exposure likely involved much higher intensities than typical consumer devices, the fundamental biological vulnerability remains the same. The science demonstrates that our hearts are sensitive to electromagnetic interference, whether from industrial microwave equipment or the growing density of wireless devices in our daily environment.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{__g3773,
author = {В. П. Медведев},
title = {ЗАБОЛЕВАНИЯ СЕРДЕЧНО-СОСУДИСТОЙ СИСТЕМЫ У ЛИЦ, ПОДВЕРГАВШИХСЯ В ПРОШЛОМ ВОЗДЕЙСТВИЮ ЭЛЕКТРОМАГНИТНОГО ПОЛЯ СВЧ},
year = {1973},
}