HEMODYNAMIC INDICES DURING THE ACTION OF SUPER-HIGH FREQUENCY ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS
Monayenkova · 1966
1966 Soviet research investigated how microwave radiation affects heart function and blood circulation, establishing early scientific interest in EMF cardiovascular effects.
Plain English Summary
This 1966 Soviet research investigated how super-high frequency (SHF) electromagnetic fields affect blood circulation and heart function, measuring hemodynamic indices during microwave exposure. The study represents early scientific recognition that microwave radiation could influence cardiovascular systems. While specific findings aren't available, this research helped establish the foundation for understanding EMF effects on blood flow and heart function.
Why This Matters
This 1966 Soviet technical report represents a fascinating piece of EMF research history, documenting early scientific interest in how microwave radiation affects cardiovascular function. The study of hemodynamic indices - measurements of blood flow, pressure, and heart function - during SHF electromagnetic field exposure shows that concerns about microwave health effects existed decades before cell phones became ubiquitous.
What makes this particularly relevant today is that modern wireless devices operate in similar frequency ranges to what this research examined. Your smartphone, WiFi router, and microwave oven all emit electromagnetic fields that could theoretically influence the same cardiovascular parameters this 1966 study investigated. The science demonstrates that our circulatory system can respond to electromagnetic exposure, a finding that deserves serious consideration given our current levels of daily microwave radiation exposure.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{hemodynamic_indices_during_the_action_of_super_high_frequency_electromagnetic_fi_g5311,
author = {Monayenkova},
title = {HEMODYNAMIC INDICES DURING THE ACTION OF SUPER-HIGH FREQUENCY ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS},
year = {1966},
}