О воздействии СВЧ поля на систему кроветворения (Экспериментальные исследования)
Authors not listed · 1968
Soviet scientists in 1968 found microwave radiation could disrupt blood cell production in laboratory animals.
Plain English Summary
This 1968 Soviet research examined how microwave radiation affects blood cell production in laboratory rodents. The study focused on changes to red blood cells (erythrocytes) and white blood cells (leukocytes) following microwave exposure. This represents early scientific recognition that microwave frequencies could disrupt the body's blood-forming systems.
Why This Matters
This research from 1968 represents crucial early evidence that microwave radiation can disrupt blood cell production - a finding that remains highly relevant as we're surrounded by microwave-emitting devices today. The Soviet scientists were investigating the same frequency range used by modern WiFi routers, cell phones, and microwave ovens. What makes this study particularly significant is its focus on hematopoiesis (blood cell formation), a fundamental biological process that requires precise cellular coordination.
The fact that researchers nearly six decades ago documented microwave effects on blood cells should give us pause about our current exposure levels. While we don't have the specific findings from this study, the Soviet research program of this era was known for identifying biological effects at power levels far below what Western safety standards considered harmful. Today's chronic, low-level microwave exposure from multiple devices simultaneously creates an exposure scenario these early researchers never envisioned.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{__g4964,
author = {Unknown},
title = {О воздействии СВЧ поля на систему кроветворения (Экспериментальные исследования)},
year = {1968},
}