ALTERED IN VIVO LYMPHOCYTE MIGRATION FOLLOWING WHOLE-BODY RFR EXPOSURE: DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS ON T- AND B-LYMPHOCYTES
R.P. Liburdy · 1978
2.5 GHz microwave radiation disrupts immune cell movement, trapping cells in lungs and preventing normal immune function.
Plain English Summary
Scientists exposed mice to 2.5 GHz microwave radiation and found it dramatically altered how immune cells moved through the body. The radiation caused immune cells to get trapped in lungs, prevented them from reaching the spleen, and forced more cells into bone marrow than normal. This suggests microwave exposure disrupts the immune system's ability to function properly.
Why This Matters
This 1978 study reveals something deeply concerning about how microwave radiation affects our immune system's basic functioning. The researchers found that 2.5 GHz exposure disrupted the normal migration patterns of lymphocytes, the white blood cells that form the backbone of our immune response. What's particularly troubling is that this occurred at 30 mW/cm², a power density that's actually lower than what many modern wireless devices produce at close range. Your smartphone can emit similar frequencies, and WiFi routers operate in the same 2.4-2.5 GHz range.
The fact that immune cells became trapped in lungs and couldn't reach their intended destinations suggests microwave radiation interferes with fundamental biological processes. This isn't just about heating tissue, it's about disrupting the intricate cellular communication systems that keep us healthy. The study's use of radioactive tracers to follow both T-cells and B-cells simultaneously was groundbreaking for its time, providing clear evidence that our immune system doesn't function normally under microwave exposure.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{altered_in_vivo_lymphocyte_migration_following_whole_body_rfr_exposure_different_g5394,
author = {R.P. Liburdy},
title = {ALTERED IN VIVO LYMPHOCYTE MIGRATION FOLLOWING WHOLE-BODY RFR EXPOSURE: DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS ON T- AND B-LYMPHOCYTES},
year = {1978},
}