Note: This study found no significant biological effects under its experimental conditions. We include all studies for scientific completeness.
Cancer Res 62:1956-1960, 2002
No Effects Found
Authors not listed · 2002
This correspondence about colorectal cancer genetics appears unrelated to EMF research and may be misclassified.
Plain English Summary
Summary written for general audiences
This 2002 publication appears to be a scientific correspondence or letter to the editor commenting on a previous cancer research study about microsatellite instability in colorectal carcinomas. Based on the available information, this appears to be a discussion piece rather than an original EMF research study, with no apparent connection to electromagnetic field exposure or health effects.
Cite This Study
Unknown (2002). Cancer Res 62:1956-1960, 2002.
Show BibTeX
@article{cancer_res_621956_1960_2002_ce3054,
author = {Unknown},
title = {Cancer Res 62:1956-1960, 2002},
year = {2002},
}Quick Questions About This Study
No, this appears to be a correspondence piece about colorectal cancer genetics with no apparent connection to electromagnetic field exposure or EMF health effects research.
Microsatellite instability refers to genetic mutations in DNA repair mechanisms that can lead to colorectal cancer development, but this appears unrelated to EMF exposure.
This appears to be a database classification error. The study discusses cancer genetics research rather than electromagnetic field exposure or radiation health effects.
This is a correspondence or letter to the editor commenting on previous colorectal cancer research, not an original experimental study on EMF effects.
No, this correspondence about cancer genetics appears unrelated to electromagnetic field research and should not inform EMF health effect assessments or policy decisions.