FINDINGS IN 262 FATAL ACCIDENTS
G. R. Osborn · 1943
This 1943 pathology study established baseline methods for documenting tissue damage that later informed EMF research approaches.
Plain English Summary
This 1943 medical study examined pathological findings in 262 fatal accident cases, focusing on lung damage patterns including pulmonary edema and blast-related injuries. The research documented specific types of traumatic lesions found during post-mortem examinations of accident victims. While not directly EMF-related, this early work established baseline understanding of how external forces cause cellular and tissue damage in humans.
Why This Matters
Though published decades before EMF research emerged, this foundational pathology work provides crucial context for understanding how external forces damage human tissue. The science demonstrates that physical trauma creates specific, measurable patterns of cellular injury - knowledge that later proved essential when researchers began investigating whether electromagnetic fields could produce similar biological effects. What this means for you is that early medical research like this established the scientific framework for recognizing and documenting tissue damage, methods that EMF researchers would eventually adapt to study radiation-induced cellular changes. The reality is that understanding normal versus abnormal tissue responses remains fundamental to EMF health research today.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{findings_in_262_fatal_accidents_g3688,
author = {G. R. Osborn},
title = {FINDINGS IN 262 FATAL ACCIDENTS},
year = {1943},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(00)87605-9},
}