Gutiérrez-Mercado YK et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low frequency magnetic fields (120 Hz at 0.66 mT) and found that these fields increased blood vessel permeability in specific brain regions called circumventricular organs. The magnetic field exposure caused blood vessels to dilate and become more permeable to substances that normally can't cross into brain tissue. This suggests that ELF magnetic fields can compromise the brain's protective blood barrier system.
El Gohary MI, Salama AA, El Saeid AA, El Sayed TM, Kotb HS. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to magnetic fields from power lines for 15 days and monitored brain activity. The magnetic fields altered brainwave patterns, particularly in the brain's right side. Caffeine appeared to modify these effects, suggesting everyday exposures may interact in unexpected ways.
Duan Y, Wang Z, Zhang H, He Y, Lu R, Zhang R, Sun G, Sun X. · 2013
Researchers exposed mice to 50 Hz magnetic fields (8 mT) for 28 days and found significant damage to learning and memory abilities, plus harmful oxidative stress in brain tissue. When mice were also given lotus seedpod extract, these negative effects were largely prevented. This suggests that extremely low frequency electromagnetic fields can damage brain function through oxidative stress mechanisms.
Deng Y, Zhang Y, Jia S, Liu J, Liu Y, Xu W, Liu L. · 2013
Researchers exposed mice to power line frequency magnetic fields for 8 weeks and found significant brain damage including memory loss, brain cell death, and cellular stress markers. While exposure levels exceeded typical household amounts, the study demonstrates these electromagnetic fields can directly harm brain tissue.
Celik MS et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to magnetic fields from power lines while giving them manganese, a potentially toxic mineral. Magnetic field exposure significantly increased manganese buildup in the brain, kidneys, and liver, suggesting everyday electrical exposures may enhance absorption of harmful metals.
Calabrò E et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed brain cells to 50 Hz magnetic fields (household electricity frequency) at different strengths. Higher exposures damaged cell membrane proteins and reduced energy production in mitochondria, leading to decreased cell survival and suggesting power-frequency fields harm basic cellular functions.
Balassa T et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed pregnant and newborn rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields (household electricity frequency) during brain development. The exposure altered how brain cells communicate, increasing electrical activity but impairing the brain's ability to form new memories and connections during critical developmental periods.
Bai WF, Xu WC, Feng Y, Huang H, Li XP, Deng CY, Zhang MS. · 2013
Chinese researchers exposed stem cells from rat bone marrow to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) for one hour daily over 12 days. The electromagnetic field exposure helped these stem cells transform into functional brain neurons that could form connections and transmit electrical signals. This suggests that power-frequency magnetic fields might have therapeutic potential for treating nervous system diseases through stem cell therapy.
Amirifalah Z, Firoozabadi SM, Shafiei SA. · 2013
Researchers exposed 10 women to weak magnetic fields targeting brain regions for 9 minutes. The exposure reduced specific brainwave activity by 12-27% after treatment ended. This suggests targeted magnetic fields could potentially help treat conditions like anxiety by calming overactive brain areas.
Akdag MZ, Dasdag S, Cakir DU, Yokus B, Kizil G, Kizil M. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to magnetic fields at levels considered safe for humans for 10 months. The fields didn't affect Alzheimer's-related proteins but significantly increased markers of cellular damage in brain tissue, suggesting long-term exposure may harm brain cells.
Wang H et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to microwave radiation at 2.856 GHz for 6 minutes and tested their memory using a water maze. Rats exposed to higher power levels (10 and 50 mW/cm²) showed significant memory problems and brain damage, including damaged brain cells and disrupted connections between neurons. The study reveals that microwave exposure can impair the brain's ability to form memories by damaging the hippocampus, the brain region critical for learning.
Vecsei Z, Csathó A, Thuróczy G, Hernádi I · 2013
Researchers exposed 20 young adults to cell phone-like radiation (UMTS signals) for 30 minutes while testing their sensitivity to heat-induced pain on their fingertips. They found that radiation exposure altered how the nervous system processes repeated painful stimuli, reducing the normal desensitization that occurs with repeated pain. This suggests that cell phone radiation can influence how our nervous system responds to pain signals.
Tong J, Chen S, Liu XM, Hao DM · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to 900 MHz cell phone radiation and measured brain activity in the hippocampus, which controls learning and memory. After just 10 minutes, normal brain cell firing decreased while abnormal electrical bursts increased, potentially impairing cognitive function.
Sharma A, Sisodia R, Bhatnagar D, Saxena VK · 2013
Researchers exposed mice to 10 GHz microwave radiation for two hours daily over 30 days, then tested their memory using a water maze. Exposed mice took significantly longer to learn and remember locations, with reduced brain protein levels, suggesting microwave exposure may impair learning and memory.
Pelletier A et al. · 2013
French researchers exposed young rats to cell phone-frequency radiation for five weeks and found disrupted sleep patterns, reduced blood flow to extremities, and increased daytime eating. These changes suggest that chronic radiofrequency exposure can interfere with the body's natural energy regulation systems.
Odacı E et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) daily during late pregnancy. Their offspring showed spinal cord damage and increased motor activity compared to unexposed pups, suggesting prenatal EMF exposure can disrupt normal nervous system development.
Ntzouni MP et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed mice to cell phone radiation (GSM 1.8 GHz) for 90 minutes daily to test effects on memory. After weeks of exposure, the mice showed significant problems with both spatial memory (remembering locations) and non-spatial memory (recognizing objects). These memory problems persisted for two weeks after radiation stopped but fully recovered after a month, suggesting the brain can repair this type of damage over time.
Narayanan SN et al. · 2013
Young rats exposed to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for 28 days showed increased anxiety behaviors in maze tests, avoiding open spaces and showing more stress signs like increased defecation. This suggests cell phone radiation may affect emotional development in young brains.
Moretti D et al. · 2013
French researchers exposed lab-grown brain cells to cell phone radiation at 1800 MHz (the frequency used by GSM cell phones) for just 3 minutes. They found that the radiation caused a 30% decrease in the neurons' electrical activity - essentially making the brain cells less active. This effect was reversible, meaning the neurons returned to normal activity levels after the exposure ended.
Mandalà M et al. · 2013
Researchers directly exposed the auditory nerves of 12 patients to both mobile phone radiation (900 MHz) and Bluetooth headset radiation (2.4 GHz) during surgery. They found that mobile phone EMFs significantly impaired nerve function by reducing signal strength and delaying response times, while Bluetooth EMFs caused no measurable changes. This suggests Bluetooth headsets may be a safer alternative for protecting auditory nerve health during phone calls.
Lv B, Chen Z, Wu T, Shao Q, Yan D, Ma L, Lu K, Xie Y. · 2013
Researchers exposed 18 people to 4G cell phone signals for 30 minutes, then scanned their brains. The exposure reduced normal brain activity in areas controlling hearing, movement, and decision-making. This shows that brief wireless exposure can measurably change how your brain functions.
Hao D, Yang L, Chen S, Tong J, Tian Y, Su B, Wu S, Zeng Y · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to 916 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone signals) for 6 hours daily over 10 weeks and tested their ability to navigate a maze to find food. The exposed rats showed significantly impaired learning and memory during weeks 4-5, taking longer to complete the maze and making more errors, while brain recordings revealed disrupted neuron firing patterns throughout the study.
Haghani M, Shabani M, Moazzami K · 2013
Pregnant rats exposed to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for six hours daily produced offspring with altered brain function. While the young rats behaved normally, their Purkinje neurons (cells controlling movement and learning) showed reduced electrical activity, suggesting prenatal exposure affects developing brain circuits.
Deshmukh PS et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low-level microwave radiation at cell phone frequencies (900, 1800, and 2450 MHz) for two hours daily over 30 days and found DNA damage in brain tissue. The exposure levels were about 1,000 times lower than current safety limits, yet still caused measurable genetic damage. This suggests that even very weak microwave radiation can harm brain cells at the DNA level.
Deshmukh PS et al. · 2013
Researchers exposed rats to extremely low-level cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for 2 hours daily over 30 days and found significant damage to memory and learning abilities. The study also detected increased oxidative stress in the blood, indicating cellular damage from free radicals. This matters because the radiation level used was far below current safety limits, yet still produced measurable biological effects.