The impact of exposure of diabetic rats to 900 MHz electromagnetic radiation emitted from mobile phone antenna on hepatic oxidative stress
Authors not listed · 2019
Cell phone tower radiation may worsen liver damage in diabetics by disrupting protective cellular pathways.
Plain English Summary
Researchers exposed diabetic rats to 900 MHz cell phone tower radiation for 28 days and found it worsened liver damage. The radiation increased harmful oxidative stress markers in the liver while disrupting protective cellular pathways. This suggests diabetic patients may be particularly vulnerable to EMF exposure from cell towers and mobile devices.
Why This Matters
This study reveals a concerning vulnerability that affects millions of Americans with type 2 diabetes. The research demonstrates that 900 MHz radiation - the same frequency used by GSM cell towers and older mobile phones - can worsen liver oxidative stress in diabetic conditions. What makes this particularly troubling is the 24-hour daily exposure protocol, which mirrors our real-world situation where cell tower radiation is constant and inescapable.
The findings show that EMF exposure disrupted the Akt-2 protein pathway, which normally helps protect cells from damage. This suggests that people with diabetes may face compounded health risks from our increasingly electromagnetic environment. Given that over 37 million Americans have diabetes, and cell tower density continues to increase in populated areas, this research points to a public health consideration that deserves immediate attention from both medical professionals and regulatory agencies.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{the_impact_of_exposure_of_diabetic_rats_to_900_mhz_electromagnetic_radiation_emitted_from_mobile_phone_antenna_on_hepatic_oxidative_stress_ce2427,
author = {Unknown},
title = {The impact of exposure of diabetic rats to 900 MHz electromagnetic radiation emitted from mobile phone antenna on hepatic oxidative stress},
year = {2019},
doi = {10.1080/15368378.2019.1641722},
}