8,700 Studies Reviewed. 87.0% Found Biological Effects. The Evidence is Clear.

EMF Research Studies

Browse 8,700 peer-reviewed studies on electromagnetic field health effects from 4 research libraries.

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Showing 742 studies in Cancer & Tumors

Residential magnetic field exposure and childhood brain cancer: a meta-analysis

Unknown authors · 2008

Researchers analyzed 13 studies examining whether living near power lines increases childhood brain cancer risk. They found no increased risk for most exposure levels, but couldn't rule out a moderate risk increase at the highest magnetic field exposures (above 0.3-0.4 microT). The analysis included over a decade of research on residential magnetic field exposure.

A new electromagnetic exposure metric: High frequency voltage transients associated with increased cancer incidence in teachers in a california school

Unknown authors · 2008

Researchers investigated unusually high cancer rates among teachers at a California middle school, finding 16 teachers developed 18 cancers between 1988-2005. The study discovered a strong correlation between cancer incidence and high frequency voltage transients (electrical noise) on classroom wiring, with teachers facing 2.78 times the expected cancer rate overall.

Occupational electromagnetic fields and leukemia and brain cancer: an update to two meta-analyses

Unknown authors · 2008

UCLA researchers updated previous analyses of workplace electromagnetic field exposure and cancer risk, examining studies from 1993-2007. They found small increases in brain cancer (10%) and leukemia (13%) risk among EMF-exposed workers, but noted these increases were smaller than in earlier analyses and showed no clear exposure-response pattern.

Cancer & Tumors101 citations

Future needs of occupational epidemiology of extremely low frequency (ELF) electric and magnetic fields (EMF): review and recommendations

Unknown authors · 2008

This 2008 research review examined decades of workplace studies on extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic field exposure and health outcomes including cancer, heart disease, and neurological conditions. The analysis found no strong or consistent associations between occupational EMF exposure and disease, though poor exposure assessment methods in many studies made definitive conclusions difficult. The researchers identified ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease) as needing urgent investigation due to reported links with electrical occupations.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Assessing the Potential Leukemogenic Effects of 50 Hz and their Harmonics Using an Animal Leukemia Model

Unknown authors · 2008

Scientists exposed 280 rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) at 100 microT while chemically inducing leukemia to test if EMF exposure increases cancer risk. The study found no significant differences in leukemia development, survival rates, or disease severity between exposed and unexposed rats. This research suggests that power line frequency magnetic fields do not promote or accelerate leukemia development in this animal model.

Cancer & Tumors129 citations

Exposure to electromagnetic fields and the risk of childhood leukaemia: a review

Unknown authors · 2008

This 2008 review examined the connection between electromagnetic field exposure and childhood leukemia risk. The analysis confirmed that extremely low-frequency magnetic fields above 0.3-0.4 microT are associated with increased childhood leukemia risk, leading to their classification as possibly carcinogenic. However, no biological mechanism has been established and the association could still be due to chance or bias.

Case-only study of interactions between DNA repair genes (hMLH1, APEX1, MGMT, XRCC1 and XPD) and low- frequency electromagnetic fields in childhood acute leukemia

Unknown authors · 2008

Researchers studied 123 children with acute leukemia to see if certain DNA repair gene variants interact with power line and transformer EMF exposure. They found children with a specific XRCC1 gene variant had over 4 times higher odds of leukemia when living within 100 meters of electrical infrastructure. This suggests some children may be genetically more vulnerable to low-level electromagnetic field exposure.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Childhood Leukemia in Relation to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields in the Vicinity of TV and Radio Broadcast Transmitters

Unknown authors · 2008

German researchers studied 1,959 children with leukemia and 5,848 healthy controls living near TV and radio broadcast transmitters between 1984-2003. They found no increased risk of childhood leukemia from radio frequency electromagnetic field exposure, even among children living within 2 kilometers of high-power broadcast towers. The study represents one of the largest investigations into broadcast tower EMF and childhood cancer.

Cancer & Tumors455 citations

Biological effects from electromagnetic field exposure and public exposure standards

Unknown authors · 2008

This 2008 review by researchers Hardell and Sage examined biological effects from electromagnetic field exposure and concluded that current safety standards are inadequate. The authors found evidence linking both power line frequencies and wireless radiation to health problems including childhood leukemia, brain tumors, and immune system disruption. They called for significantly lower exposure limits based on documented biological effects occurring at levels well below current guidelines.

Cancer & Tumors455 citations

Biological effects from electromagnetic field exposure and public exposure standards

Unknown authors · 2008

This 2008 review examined biological effects from both power line frequencies and wireless radiation, finding evidence linking EMF exposure to childhood leukemia, brain tumors, and other health effects. The authors concluded that current safety standards ignore non-thermal effects and recommended significantly lower exposure limits. The paper specifically highlighted the BioInitiative Report's findings that reasonable suspicion of health risks exists at environmentally relevant EMF levels.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found141 citations

Mobile phone use, exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic field, and brain tumour: a case-control study

Unknown authors · 2008

Japanese researchers studied 322 brain tumor patients and 683 healthy controls to examine whether mobile phone use increases brain tumor risk. They found no significant increase in brain tumor risk from mobile phone use, even when accounting for the specific absorption rate (SAR) of radiation inside tumor tissue. All exposure levels were well below thermal heating thresholds.

Whole Body / GeneralNo Effects Found176 citations

Recall bias in the assessment of exposure to mobile phones

Unknown authors · 2008

Researchers analyzed mobile phone records from 212 brain tumor patients and 296 healthy controls to check if people accurately remember their past phone use. Both groups made similar memory errors - underestimating call frequency by 19% while overestimating call duration by 40%. This finding suggests that memory bias likely doesn't skew mobile phone health studies significantly.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Mobile phone radiation and the risk of cancer; a review

Unknown authors · 2008

Nigerian researchers reviewed decades of scientific studies examining whether mobile phone radiation causes cancer. The review found no significant increase in cancer rates among mobile phone users, even in studies following people for over ten years. However, the authors emphasized caution since cancer can take up to 40 years to develop.

Cancer & Tumors380 citations

Genetic damage in subjects exposed to radiofrequency radiation

Unknown authors · 2008

This 2008 scientific discussion examined risk factors for childhood leukemia, including potential environmental exposures like radiofrequency radiation. The analysis reviewed evidence linking various factors to increased leukemia risk in children. This research contributes to ongoing investigations into whether EMF exposure may play a role in childhood cancer development.

Mobile phones and brain tumours: a review of epidemiological research

Unknown authors · 2008

Australian researchers reviewed all available epidemiological studies examining whether mobile phone use increases brain tumor risk. While some individual studies suggested weak associations between long-term phone use and certain brain tumors, the overall evidence was inconsistent and likely influenced by recall bias. The review concluded that the research does not provide convincing evidence of a link between mobile phones and brain tumors.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found209 citations

Cellular phone use and risk of benign and malignant parotid gland tumors--a nationwide case-control study.

Sadetzki S et al. · 2008

Israeli researchers studied 460 people with parotid gland tumors (located near the ear) and compared their cell phone use to 1,266 healthy controls. While overall cell phone use didn't increase tumor risk, heavy users who held phones directly to their heads showed a 58% higher risk of developing tumors on the same side where they used their phone. This suggests that intensive cell phone use without hands-free devices may increase risk of tumors in glands near where the phone is held.

Cellular EffectsNo Effects Found

Acute radio frequency irradiation does not affect cell cycle, cellular migration, and invasion.

Lee JJ et al. · 2008

Researchers exposed mouse cells to cell phone-level radiofrequency radiation (849 MHz) at power levels of 2 or 10 watts per kilogram for up to three days and measured whether this affected cell division, movement, or invasion capabilities. They found no statistically significant changes in any of these cellular functions compared to unexposed cells. This suggests that short-term RF exposure at these power levels does not disrupt basic cellular processes related to growth and migration.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Meningioma and mobile phone use--a collaborative case-control study in five North European countries.

Lahkola A et al. · 2008

Researchers studied 1,209 people with meningiomas (a type of brain tumor) and 3,299 healthy controls across five European countries to see if mobile phone use increases tumor risk. They found that regular mobile phone users actually had a 24% lower risk of developing meningiomas compared to non-users or occasional users. The study found no increased risk regardless of how long people used phones, how many calls they made, or what type of network they used.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Mobile phone base station radiation does not affect neoplastic transformation in BALB/3T3 cells.

Hirose H et al. · 2008

Researchers exposed mouse cells to radiofrequency radiation from mobile phone base stations for six weeks to see if it would cause cancerous changes. Even at high exposure levels (800 mW/kg), the radiation did not increase the rate of cell transformation into cancer cells. This suggests that base station radiation at these levels doesn't directly promote tumor formation in laboratory conditions.

Cancer & Tumors174 citations

Meta-analysis of long-term mobile phone use and the association with brain tumours.

Hardell L, Carlberg M, Söderqvist F, Hansson Mild K. · 2008

Researchers analyzed data from multiple studies examining whether long-term mobile phone use increases brain tumor risk. They found that when people used phones for 10 years or longer on the same side of their head where tumors developed, the risk of glioma (a type of brain cancer) doubled and acoustic neuroma (a benign tumor) risk increased by 140%. However, using phones on the opposite side of the head showed no increased risk.

[Mutagenic, carcinogenic and teratogenic effects induced by radiofrequency electromagnetic field of mobile phone.]

Chen ZJ, He JL. · 2008

Chinese researchers reviewed existing studies on whether mobile phone radiofrequency radiation causes DNA mutations, cancer, or birth defects. They found conflicting results across different studies, with most research not supporting the idea that RF exposure causes these genetic effects. However, the authors noted that more research is needed on health effects from low-level RF exposure.

Distribution of RF energy emitted by mobile phones in anatomical structures of the brain.

Cardis E et al. · 2008

Researchers measured how radio frequency energy from mobile phones distributes throughout the brain by testing 110 different phone models. They found that 97-99% of the RF energy is absorbed in the brain hemisphere closest to the phone, with 50-60% concentrated in the temporal lobe (the area above your ear). This uneven distribution pattern was consistent across different phone types and suggests that if mobile phones pose cancer risks, brain tumors would most likely develop in these high-absorption areas.

A 60-Hz sinusoidal magnetic field induces apoptosis of prostate cancer cells through reactive oxygen species.

Koh EK, Ryu BK, Jeong DY, Bang IS, Nam MH, Chae KS · 2008

Researchers exposed prostate cancer cells to 60-Hz magnetic fields (the frequency of household electricity) and found the fields killed cancer cells by increasing harmful molecules called reactive oxygen species. This suggests power-line frequency magnetic fields might potentially be developed as cancer treatments.

Study on potential effects of "902-MHz GSM-type Wireless Communication Signals" on DMBA-induced mammary tumours in Sprague-Dawley rats.

Hruby R, Neubauer G, Kuster N, Frauscher M · 2008

Researchers exposed rats to 902 MHz GSM-type wireless signals (similar to cell phone radiation) for 4 hours daily over 6 months after giving them a chemical known to cause breast cancer. The RF-exposed rats showed statistically significant increases in palpable tissue masses and more malignant tumors compared to sham-exposed controls, though the researchers concluded these differences were likely incidental due to high variability in the cancer model used.

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