UROLOGIC ELECTROSURGERY
Not clearly visible · 1935
This 1935 study documented early medical use of radiofrequency energy in surgery, predating modern EMF safety research.
Plain English Summary
This 1935 medical study examined the use of high-frequency electrical currents in urological surgery, particularly for prostate procedures like transurethral resection. The research focused on electrosurgical techniques that use radiofrequency energy to cut and cauterize tissue during surgical procedures. This represents early documentation of medical RF exposure in surgical settings.
Why This Matters
This 1935 study represents one of the earliest documented uses of radiofrequency energy in medical procedures, specifically urological electrosurgery. What makes this historically significant is that it predates our modern understanding of EMF bioeffects by decades, yet demonstrates how medical professionals were already exposing patients to substantial RF fields during surgery. The radiofrequency currents used in electrosurgery operate at much higher power levels than consumer devices, typically generating localized heating effects to cut and seal tissue.
While electrosurgery remains a standard medical practice today, this early research highlights how long humans have been exposed to therapeutic RF fields without comprehensive safety studies. Modern electrosurgical units operate at frequencies between 300 kHz to 3 MHz, delivering power levels thousands of times higher than cell phones, yet with different exposure patterns and durations that make direct comparisons challenging.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{urologic_electrosurgery_g7127,
author = {Not clearly visible},
title = {UROLOGIC ELECTROSURGERY},
year = {1935},
}