A Prolonged exposure to Wi-Fi Radiation Induces Neurobehavioral Changes and Oxidative Stress in Adult Zebrafish
Authors not listed · 2025
30 days of daily Wi-Fi exposure caused measurable brain damage and behavioral problems in vertebrates.
Plain English Summary
Researchers exposed adult zebrafish to Wi-Fi radiation (2.45 GHz) for 4 hours daily over 30 days and found significant behavioral problems, movement changes, reduced brain chemicals, and increased oxidative stress. This study adds to growing evidence that chronic Wi-Fi exposure may harm brain function in vertebrates.
Why This Matters
This zebrafish study provides compelling evidence that everyday Wi-Fi exposure can cause measurable brain damage. The 2.45 GHz frequency tested is identical to what your home router emits, and the 4-hour daily exposure mirrors typical household patterns where devices stay connected throughout the day. What makes this research particularly significant is the comprehensive approach - the researchers didn't just look at one marker but documented behavioral changes, movement problems, disrupted brain chemistry, and cellular damage from oxidative stress. The science demonstrates that chronic exposure to the same Wi-Fi signals we live with daily can fundamentally alter brain function. While some dismiss animal studies, zebrafish share remarkable genetic and neurological similarities with humans, making them valuable models for understanding potential human health effects.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{a_prolonged_exposure_to_wi_fi_radiation_induces_neurobehavioral_changes_and_oxidative_stress_in_adult_zebrafish_ce3237,
author = {Unknown},
title = {A Prolonged exposure to Wi-Fi Radiation Induces Neurobehavioral Changes and Oxidative Stress in Adult Zebrafish},
year = {2025},
doi = {10.36948/ijfmr.2025.v07i04.52286},
}