REVIEW OF WORK ACCOMPLISHED AT THE NEW ENGLAND INSTITUTE FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH
A. A. Teixoira-Pinto, John I. Cutler, John H. Heller
Early research showed RF fields can disrupt immune cell function and cause biological materials to reorganize.
Plain English Summary
This research from the New England Institute for Medical Research examined how radiofrequency (RF) fields affect immune system function, specifically studying phagocytic activity (the ability of immune cells to engulf harmful particles) and the reticuloendothelial system. The study also investigated the 'pearl-chain phenomenon,' where biological materials align in specific patterns under electromagnetic field exposure.
Why This Matters
This early research into RF field effects on immune function touches on a critical concern that remains highly relevant today. The reticuloendothelial system, which includes immune cells throughout your body that filter out toxins and pathogens, represents a fundamental defense mechanism. Any disruption to phagocytic function could potentially compromise your body's ability to clear cellular debris and fight infections.
What makes this particularly significant is that we're now exposed to RF fields at levels and durations far exceeding what existed when this research was conducted. Your smartphone, WiFi router, and countless wireless devices emit RF radiation continuously. If RF fields can indeed alter immune cell behavior and create the pearl-chain phenomenon in biological materials, this suggests your immune system may be operating under constant electromagnetic stress.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{review_of_work_accomplished_at_the_new_england_institute_for_medical_research_g5255,
author = {A. A. Teixoira-Pinto and John I. Cutler and John H. Heller},
title = {REVIEW OF WORK ACCOMPLISHED AT THE NEW ENGLAND INSTITUTE FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH},
year = {n.d.},
}