Erich Pflomm · 1931
This 1934 German study investigated how ultrashort electrical waves (early radio frequency radiation) affected inflammatory processes in laboratory animals. The research examined both experimental and clinical applications, exploring whether these electromagnetic fields could be used therapeutically to treat inflammation. This represents some of the earliest scientific work documenting biological effects from RF radiation exposure.
d'ARSONVAL, CHARRIN · 1896
This 1896 French study by D'Arsonval investigated how electricity affects bacterial toxins, specifically examining pyocyanic and diphtheria toxins. The research explored whether electrical treatment could modify these dangerous bacterial substances, potentially offering insights into early electromagnetic therapy approaches.
Unknown authors
This study investigated how a single exposure to 2450 MHz microwave radiation affects immune cells in mouse spleens, specifically tracking changes in complement receptor positive (CR+) cells. The research examined the timing and biological mechanisms behind these immune system changes. The 2450 MHz frequency is the same used in microwave ovens and some WiFi devices.
Finch ED, McLees BD
This technical report examined how radio-frequency radiation affects three important biological molecules: gamma globulin (immune system protein), acetylcholinesterase (nerve function enzyme), and chymotrypsin (digestive enzyme). The research investigated whether RF exposure could alter these critical proteins that regulate immune response, nervous system function, and protein digestion.
Unknown authors
This technical report examined how 2450 MHz microwave radiation affects immune system function and blood cell production in laboratory mice. The research focused on changes in lymphocytes and other blood cells after microwave exposure. This frequency matches common household microwave ovens and some industrial heating applications.
Unknown authors
This mouse study investigated how microwave radiation exposure affects immune system cells in the spleen, specifically looking at lymphoid cells that carry complement receptors. The researchers found that microwave exposure increased the frequency of these immune cells, suggesting that microwave radiation can alter immune system function at the cellular level.
Wieslaw Wiktor-Jedrzejczak et al.
Researchers investigated how 2450 MHz microwave radiation affects immune system function in laboratory mice. This frequency matches standard microwave ovens and some industrial heating applications. The study examined whether microwave exposure alters immune responses, contributing to our understanding of how radiofrequency radiation might affect biological defense systems.
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This Southern Medical Journal study examined Diapulse therapy, which uses pulsed high-frequency (PUHF) electromagnetic energy to treat rheumatic diseases like arthritis. The research investigated whether this specific RF electromagnetic therapy could provide therapeutic benefits for inflammatory joint conditions. This represents early medical exploration of using controlled electromagnetic fields as a treatment modality.
HADUCH, S
This NASA technical report investigated how high-frequency electromagnetic fields affect the human body, with particular focus on white blood cells (leukocytes) and neutrophil granulocytes. The research examined biological responses to radiofrequency radiation exposure, contributing to our understanding of how EMF affects immune system components.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed male rats to 1.29 GHz microwave radiation at 15 mW/cm² for 90 minutes and measured stress hormone levels in their blood. The exposed rats showed dramatically elevated corticosterone (stress hormone) levels that were 6-8 times higher than unexposed rats after 75 minutes. This study demonstrates that microwave radiation can trigger significant stress responses in the body at frequencies close to those used by cell phones.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats and their offspring to 100-MHz radiofrequency radiation for months, finding no effects on growth, immune function, or blood counts. However, the study revealed significant changes in brain acetylcholinesterase activity, an enzyme critical for nerve signal transmission.
P. Jitariu
Researchers exposed animal organs to low-frequency electromagnetic fields (50-100 Hz) and found significant physiological changes. The study documented alterations in blood chemistry, thyroid and adrenal gland activity, phosphorus metabolism, kidney function, and immune system response. These findings demonstrate that power-line frequency EMF can measurably affect multiple organ systems in animals.
Richard L. Magin, Shin-Tsu Lu, Sol M. Michaelson
Researchers exposed dogs' thyroid glands to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (the same frequency used in microwave ovens) and found changes in thyroxine hormone production. The study concluded these effects were caused by tissue heating rather than non-thermal biological mechanisms. This demonstrates that microwave radiation can disrupt normal thyroid function through thermal effects.
Roger Budd, Przemyslaw Czerski, LeRoy W. Schroeder
This technical report by Roger Budd evaluated scientific literature on how RF and microwave radiation affects the immune system and cell membranes. The study used dielectric relaxation spectroscopy to examine cellular responses. The evaluation found mixed effects, suggesting some biological impacts occur but results vary across studies.
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Researchers exposed mice to 9 GHz pulsed microwaves at 10 mW/cm² for 2 hours daily over 5 days and found significantly increased antibody production. However, despite higher antibody levels, the microwave-exposed mice died at the same rate as unexposed mice when challenged with a deadly bacterial infection.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed mice to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (similar to microwave ovens) for up to 4 months, then treated them with cancer-causing chemicals to see if the radiation affected tumor development. The study examined whether long-term microwave exposure changes immune system function in ways that could influence cancer risk.
Unknown authors
Scientists exposed rats to pulsed microwave radiation at two different power levels for seven weeks to study effects on blood cells. At the higher power level (24.4 mW/cm²), white blood cell counts dropped significantly during the second half of exposure. At the lower power level (1 mW/cm²), no blood cell changes occurred.
A. DEFICIS, J.C. DUMAS, S. LAURENS
This conference paper examined biological changes in Swiss mice exposed to microwave radiation, focusing on effects to nervous system function and immune responses. The research investigated how microwave irradiation altered normal biological processes, including nerve conduction and immune system activity. This type of foundational research helps establish the biological mechanisms through which microwave radiation affects living systems.
A. A. Teixoira-Pinto, John I. Cutler, John H. Heller
This research from the New England Institute for Medical Research examined how radiofrequency (RF) fields affect immune system function, specifically studying phagocytic activity (the ability of immune cells to engulf harmful particles) and the reticuloendothelial system. The study also investigated the 'pearl-chain phenomenon,' where biological materials align in specific patterns under electromagnetic field exposure.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed mice to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (the same frequency used in microwave ovens and WiFi) and found it significantly increased immune cells in their spleens. Even a brief 15-minute exposure triggered measurable immune system changes, with effects peaking after 45 minutes of exposure.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed female mice to 425 MHz radio frequency radiation for one hour daily over five days, testing both continuous and pulsed wave signals at various power levels. The study found no effects on the mice's primary immune response to sheep red blood cells, as measured by antibody-producing cell counts.
Unknown authors
Scientists studied how microwave hyperthermia (heat treatment) used in cancer therapy affects the immune system. They found that immune cell reactions change dramatically depending on temperature - cells are stimulated at 39-41°C but inhibited at 42-44°C. This reveals that microwave heating has complex effects on immune function that vary with temperature.