SHORT WAVE THERAPY IN PYOGENIC SKIN INFECTIONS
TIBOR DE CHOLNOKY, M.D. · 1935
1935 medical research using RF therapy for skin infections proves electromagnetic fields have biological effects.
Plain English Summary
This 1935 study by Dr. T.D. Cholnoky examined the use of short wave radiofrequency therapy to treat pyogenic skin infections, including furuncles (boils). The research investigated whether controlled RF energy could serve as an effective medical treatment for bacterial skin conditions. This represents early medical application of the same type of electromagnetic energy we're now concerned about from wireless devices.
Why This Matters
This nearly century-old research highlights a fascinating paradox in our relationship with radiofrequency energy. While Dr. Cholnoky was exploring RF as a therapeutic tool for skin infections in 1935, we now understand that the same type of electromagnetic energy can have biological effects that raise health concerns. The science demonstrates that RF energy interacts with living tissue in complex ways - sometimes therapeutically beneficial in controlled medical settings, sometimes potentially harmful with chronic low-level exposure from modern wireless devices.
What makes this historical perspective particularly relevant is that it shows RF energy has measurable biological effects, period. The question isn't whether RF affects biological systems (it clearly does), but rather at what exposure levels and durations these effects become concerning for everyday health. This early medical research actually supports the fundamental premise that electromagnetic fields interact with our bodies in ways we're still working to fully understand.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{short_wave_therapy_in_pyogenic_skin_infections_g5561,
author = {TIBOR DE CHOLNOKY and M.D.},
title = {SHORT WAVE THERAPY IN PYOGENIC SKIN INFECTIONS},
year = {1935},
}