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 1,859 studies (Rodent Studies)

Aweda MA, Gbenebitse S, Meidinyo RO

Unknown authors · 2003

Researchers exposed 120 rats to 2.45 GHz microwave radiation (the same frequency as microwave ovens) and found it significantly increased harmful oxidative stress in their bodies. However, giving the rats antioxidants like vitamin C and vitamin E before exposure provided substantial protection against this cellular damage.

Magnetic field (50 Hz) increases N-acetyltransferase, hydroxy-indole-O-methyltransferase activity and melatonin release through an indirect pathway

Unknown authors · 2003

Researchers exposed rat pineal glands to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) and found the fields enhanced melatonin production when combined with norepinephrine stimulation. The magnetic fields didn't directly affect the melatonin-producing enzymes but instead altered the cellular signaling pathway that controls melatonin release.

Magnetic field (50 Hz) increases N-acetyltransferase, hydroxy-indole-O-methyltransferase activity and melatonin release through an indirect pathway

Unknown authors · 2003

Israeli researchers exposed rat pineal glands to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) and found that the fields enhanced the production of melatonin, the hormone that regulates sleep cycles. The magnetic field didn't directly affect the enzymes that make melatonin, but instead altered the cellular pathway that controls these enzymes. This suggests that power line frequency EMF can disrupt the body's natural hormone production systems.

Cancer & TumorsNo Effects Found

Effects of mobile phone radiation on UV-induced skin tumourigenesis in ornithine decarboxylase transgenic and non-transgenic mice.

Heikkinen P et al. · 2003

Finnish researchers exposed mice to mobile phone radiation for one year while also exposing them to UV light to see if the combination would increase skin cancer rates. The mobile phone radiation alone did not significantly increase tumor development, though there was a slight acceleration in tumor growth timing that the researchers noted deserves further investigation.

Immune SystemNo Effects Found

Effects of In Vivo Exposure to GSM-Modulated 900 MHz Radiation on Mouse Peripheral Lymphocytes.

Gatta L et al. · 2003

Researchers exposed mice to cell phone radiation (900 MHz GSM) for 2 hours daily over 1-4 weeks to see if it would affect their immune system cells in the spleen. They found no significant changes in the numbers or types of immune cells, and the cells responded normally when stimulated. The study concluded that cell phone radiation at these levels is unlikely to cause clinically relevant immune system problems.

Brain & Nervous SystemNo Effects Found110 citations

Head-only exposure to GSM 900-MHz electromagnetic fields does not alter rat's memory in spatial and non-spatial tasks.

Dubreuil D, Jay T, Edeline JM. · 2003

Researchers exposed rats to 900 MHz cell phone radiation (GSM signals) for 45 minutes to test whether it affected their memory and learning abilities. The rats performed just as well as unexposed rats on complex maze tests and object recognition tasks, with one group even showing slightly better performance. This suggests that brief exposure to cell phone-level radiation doesn't impair memory function in rats.

Immune SystemNo Effects Found

Effects of GSM-900 microwaves on the experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) rat model of multiple sclerosis.

Anane R et al. · 2003

Researchers exposed rats with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a laboratory model of multiple sclerosis, to 900 MHz cell phone radiation for 2 hours daily over 21 days. The study found no effect of the radiation exposure on the onset, duration, or severity of the autoimmune disease symptoms. This suggests that short-term cell phone radiation exposure may not worsen multiple sclerosis-like conditions, though longer-term effects remain unknown.

Effects of low level pulsed radio frequency fields on induced osteoporosis in rat bone.

Jayanand, Behari J, Lochan R. · 2003

Researchers exposed rats with artificially induced bone loss (osteoporosis) to pulsed radiofrequency fields at 14 MHz. The electromagnetic field exposure significantly increased bone mineral density and slowed the bone breakdown process compared to untreated rats. This suggests certain radiofrequency patterns might have therapeutic potential for treating osteoporosis.

1439 MHz pulsed TDMA fields affect performance of rats in a T-maze task only when body temperature is elevated.

Yamaguchi H et al. · 2003

Researchers exposed rats to cell phone-type radiation (1439 MHz) while testing their ability to learn and remember food locations in a maze. They found that only the highest exposure levels - which caused body temperature to rise - impaired the rats' learning performance. At exposure levels about four times stronger than typical cell phones (but without heating effects), no learning problems occurred.

Protective effect of melatonin and vitamin E against prooxidative action of iron ions and static magnetic field

Jajte J, Zmyślony M, Rajkowska E. · 2003

Researchers exposed rat blood cells to magnetic fields and iron ions to test for cellular damage. The combination significantly increased harmful oxidation in cells, but pre-treating cells with antioxidants like melatonin or vitamin E prevented most damage, suggesting magnetic fields may amplify iron's harmful effects.

DNA & Genetic DamageNo Effects Found

DNA damage and apoptosis in the immature mouse cerebellum after acute exposure to a 1 mT, 60 Hz magnetic field

Unknown authors · 2002

Canadian health researchers exposed 10-day-old mice to a strong 1 mT, 60 Hz magnetic field for 2 hours and looked for DNA damage and cell death in their developing brains. While one test showed slight DNA damage at 2 hours, three other tests found no damage, and no brain cell death occurred at any time point. The researchers concluded that this acute magnetic field exposure does not cause meaningful DNA damage in young mouse brains.

Magnetic field exposure increases cell proliferation but does not affect melatonin levels in the mammary gland of female Sprague Dawley rats

Unknown authors · 2002

German researchers exposed female rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields at 100 microTesla (similar to power lines) for two weeks and found significantly increased cell division in mammary gland tissue. The study challenges the popular "melatonin hypothesis" by showing breast tissue effects occurred without changes in melatonin levels. This provides direct evidence that magnetic field exposure can stimulate breast cell proliferation, potentially explaining increased cancer risk.

Magnetic field exposure increases cell proliferation but does not affect melatonin levels in the mammary gland of female Sprague Dawley rats

Unknown authors · 2002

German researchers exposed female rats to 50 Hz magnetic fields (the same frequency as European power lines) for two weeks and found significantly increased cell division in mammary gland tissue. The study directly measured cell proliferation using two different markers and found the strongest effects in the chest area where previous research had shown increased tumor development.

DNA & Genetic DamageNo Effects Found

Lack of Mutation Induction with Exposure to 1.5 GHz Electromagnetic Near Fields Used for Cellular Phones in Brains of Big Blue Mice.

Takahashi S et al. · 2002

Researchers exposed mice to 1.5 GHz radiofrequency radiation (the type used in cell phones) for 90 minutes daily over 4 weeks to test whether it could damage DNA in brain cells. They found no evidence of genetic mutations, brain tissue damage, or changes that might lead to brain tumors. The study suggests that cell phone radiation at these levels does not directly cause DNA damage in mouse brain tissue.

Oxidative StressNo Effects Found

Effect of millimeter wave radiation on catalase activity.

Logani MK, Agelan A, Ziskin MC. · 2002

Researchers exposed mice to high-intensity millimeter wave radiation at 42.2 GHz to test whether it could protect an enzyme called catalase from damage caused by chemotherapy drugs. The radiation, delivered at power levels about 1,000 times higher than typical cell phone exposure, showed no protective effect on the enzyme. This suggests that millimeter waves at these frequencies don't provide the cellular protection some researchers had hoped to find.

Brain & Nervous SystemNo Effects Found

Does head-only exposure to GSM-900 electromagnetic fields affect the performance of rats in spatial learning tasks?

Dubreuil D, Jay T, Edeline JM. · 2002

French researchers tested whether 45-minute exposures to 900-MHz GSM cell phone radiation affected spatial learning and memory in rats. They found no differences in performance on maze tasks between rats exposed to cell phone radiation (at levels of 1 and 3.5 W/kg SAR) and unexposed control rats. This contradicts some earlier studies that suggested electromagnetic fields could impair learning abilities.

Cancer & Tumors149 citations

Long-term exposure of E-mu-Pim1 transgenic mice to 898.4 MHz microwaves does not increase lymphoma incidence

Utteridge TD et al. · 2002

Researchers exposed cancer-prone mice to cell phone radiation (898.4 MHz) for up to 2 years at various intensities to see if it increased lymphoma rates. They found no significant increase in cancer incidence at any exposure level, even in mice genetically predisposed to develop lymphomas. This study contradicted an earlier 1997 study that found increased cancer risk from similar radiofrequency exposure.

Effects of exposure to low level radiofrequency fields on acetylcholine release in hippocampus of freely moving rats.

Testylier G, Tonduli L, Malabiau R, Debouzy JC · 2002

Researchers exposed freely moving rats to radiofrequency radiation at frequencies used by WiFi (2.45 GHz) and cell phones (800 MHz) to study effects on brain chemistry. They found that higher power exposures significantly reduced acetylcholine release in the hippocampus by 40-43%, a brain chemical crucial for memory and learning. The effects persisted for hours after exposure ended, suggesting that even brief RF exposure can disrupt normal brain function.

The effect of low level continuous 2.45 GHz waves on enzymes of developing rat brain.

Paulraj R, Behari J · 2002

Researchers exposed young rats to 2.45 GHz microwave radiation (the same frequency used in WiFi and microwave ovens) for 2 hours daily over 35 days at very low power levels. They found significant changes in brain chemistry, including disrupted calcium levels and altered enzyme activity that controls cell growth and development. The authors concluded these changes could promote tumor development in the developing brain.

[Suppression of nonspecific resistance of the body under the effect of extremely high frequency electromagnetic radiation of low intensity]

Kolomytseva MP, Gapeev AB, Sadovnikov VB, Chemeris NK. · 2002

Russian scientists exposed mice to 42 GHz radiation for 20 minutes daily and found it suppressed infection-fighting white blood cells by 50% after just one exposure. Five days of exposure increased total white blood cell count by 44%, suggesting millimeter waves disrupt immune function.

[Suppression of nonspecific resistance of the body under the effect of extremely high frequency electromagnetic radiation of low intensity].

Kolomytseva MP, Gapeev AB, Sadovnikov VB, Chemeris NK. · 2002

Researchers exposed mice to low-power millimeter wave radiation (42 GHz) for 20 minutes daily. The radiation suppressed immune cell function by 50% within hours and altered white blood cell counts after five days, suggesting brief exposures can compromise immune system defenses.

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