Hardell L, Carlberg M. · 2009
Swedish researchers analyzed brain tumor patients and found that people who used mobile phones or cordless phones on the same side of their head where tumors developed had significantly higher cancer risks. The risk was especially pronounced for those who started using wireless phones before age 20, with mobile phone users showing a 5.2-fold increased risk for astrocytoma (a type of brain cancer). The study also found that brain cancer rates in Sweden increased by over 2% annually during the 2000s, coinciding with widespread wireless phone adoption.
Han YY, Kano H, Davis DL, Niranjan A, Lunsford LD. · 2009
Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh reviewed 11 studies examining whether cell phone use increases the risk of acoustic neuroma, a type of brain tumor that develops near the ear. While most studies found no link, those that followed people for 10 years or longer showed cell phone users had 2.4 times higher risk of developing these tumors on the same side of their head where they held their phone. The researchers concluded that better study methods and access to actual phone usage data are needed to determine the true risk.
Hagiwara S, Iwasaka H, Takeshima N, Noguchi T. · 2009
Researchers studied how pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) treatment relieves pain in rats with induced inflammation. They found that PRF at both 37°C and 42°C significantly reduced pain by activating the body's natural pain-blocking pathways in the brain and spinal cord. This research helps explain why PRF therapy works for chronic pain conditions in humans.
de Tommaso M et al. · 2009
Researchers tested how 900 MHz cell phone signals affect brain electrical activity by measuring a specific brainwave pattern called contingent negative variation (CNV) in 10 volunteers. They found that both active phones and sham phones (with internal circuits running but no RF emission) reduced brain arousal and expectation responses compared to phones that were completely off. The study suggests that both the GSM radio signal and the low-frequency magnetic fields from the phone's battery and circuits can alter normal brain function.
Daniels WM, Pitout IL, Afullo TJ, Mabandla MV. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to electromagnetic radiation in the mobile phone frequency range and tested their behavior, brain structure, and stress hormone levels. While they found no changes in learning ability or brain structure, exposed rats showed decreased movement, increased grooming behaviors, and higher stress hormone levels. These behavioral changes suggest that mobile phone radiation may disrupt normal brain function even when obvious structural damage isn't visible.
Curcio G et al. · 2009
Italian researchers used functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure blood flow changes in the frontal cortex (the brain region behind your forehead) while 11 volunteers were exposed to cell phone radiation for 40 minutes. They found that real phone exposure caused a gradual increase in deoxygenated blood in this brain region, while fake exposure did not. This suggests that cell phone radiation can alter brain blood flow patterns even during short-term use.
Budak GG, Muluk NB, Budak B, Oztürk GG, Apan A, Seyhan N. · 2009
Researchers exposed infant rabbits to cell phone radiation (1800 MHz) both before birth (in the womb) and after birth, then measured their hearing function using specialized tests. They found that exposure after birth decreased hearing sensitivity at certain frequencies, while exposure before birth appeared to have a protective effect. The study suggests that developing ears may be particularly vulnerable to radiofrequency radiation from mobile phones.
Budak GG et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed pregnant and non-pregnant rabbits to cell phone radiation (1800 MHz GSM) for 15 minutes daily over a week, then measured their inner ear function using sensitive hearing tests. They found that non-pregnant rabbits showed significant decreases in cochlear function (the part of the ear that converts sound to nerve signals), while pregnant rabbits were largely protected from these effects. This suggests cell phone radiation can damage hearing mechanisms, but pregnancy hormones may offer some protection.
Budak GG, Muluk NB, Budak B, Oztürk GG, Apan A, Seyhan N. · 2009
Researchers exposed infant and adult female rabbits to cell phone radiation (1800 MHz GSM) for 15 minutes daily over 7 days and measured their hearing function using distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE), which test how well the inner ear responds to sound. Adult rabbits showed significant hearing damage across most frequencies tested, while infant rabbits actually showed some improved responses at certain frequencies. This suggests that developing ears may be more resilient to radiofrequency damage than mature ones, possibly due to higher water content in young ear structures.
Augner C, Hacker GW. · 2009
Austrian researchers studied 57 people who believed they lived close to cell phone towers to see if proximity affected their stress levels. Those who reported living within 100 meters of base stations showed significantly higher levels of stress hormones in their saliva and reported more anxiety, obsessive thoughts, and physical symptoms. The findings suggest that people near cell towers experience measurable biological stress, though the study couldn't determine whether this was due to actual electromagnetic field exposure or other factors.
Acar GO, Yener HM, Savrun FK, Kalkan T, Bayrak I, Enver O. · 2009
Researchers exposed rabbits to cell phone radiation (1900 MHz) for 25 minutes and measured temperature changes and nerve function in facial tissues. They found that the radiation increased tissue temperature by 0.39°C and temporarily impaired facial nerve function, with both effects returning to normal 25 minutes after exposure ended.
Abramson MJ et al. · 2009
Australian researchers tested cognitive function in 317 seventh-grade students and found that those who made more mobile phone calls performed differently on thinking tasks. Students with higher phone use showed faster but less accurate responses on complex cognitive tests, along with poorer working memory. However, since texting showed similar patterns, the researchers concluded these changes likely resulted from behavioral adaptations to frequent phone use rather than radiofrequency radiation exposure.
Cvetkovic D, Cosic I. · 2009
Researchers exposed 33 people to extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ranging from 4 to 50 Hz) and measured their brain waves using EEG. They found that specific magnetic field frequencies could alter brain wave patterns in corresponding frequency bands - for example, 10 Hz magnetic fields changed alpha brain waves (8-12 Hz). The changes depended on timing and sequence of exposure, suggesting these fields can influence brain activity in predictable ways.
Naziroğlu M, Gümral N. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to 2.45 GHz radiation (the same frequency used in WiFi and microwaves) for one hour daily over 28 days and found it depleted protective antioxidant vitamins in brain tissue. When rats were given selenium or L-carnitine supplements, these nutrients helped protect against the radiation-induced vitamin depletion. This suggests that WiFi-frequency radiation creates oxidative stress in the brain that may be partially countered by certain antioxidant supplements.
Dasdag S, Akdag MZ, Ulukaya E, Uzunlar AK, Ocak AR. · 2009
Turkish researchers exposed rats to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for 2 hours daily over 10 months to study brain cell death and oxidative stress. Surprisingly, they found that radiation exposure actually reduced brain cell death (apoptosis) and increased antioxidant activity compared to unexposed rats. This unexpected protective effect challenges assumptions about cell phone radiation's impact on brain tissue.
Capone F et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 22 healthy volunteers to pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) for 45 minutes and measured brain activity using transcranial stimulation. They found that PEMF exposure increased brain excitability by about 20%, specifically enhancing glutamate activity (a key brain chemical involved in nerve communication). This suggests that even short-term magnetic field exposure can produce measurable changes in how the human brain functions.
Vácha M, Puzová T, Kvícalová M · 2009
Researchers studied how radio frequency magnetic fields affect the ability of American cockroaches to sense Earth's magnetic field for navigation. They found that weak RF fields at specific frequencies disrupted the insects' magnetic navigation system, with the strongest disruption occurring at 1.2 MHz at levels as low as 12-18 nanotesla. This suggests that common electromagnetic pollution could interfere with the natural navigation abilities of insects and other animals.
Söderqvist F, Carlberg M, Hardell L · 2009
Swedish researchers studied 1,000 people to see if mobile and cordless phone use affected transthyretin, a protein that helps protect the brain by maintaining the blood-brain barrier. They found that long-term phone users had altered levels of this protective protein, with different patterns for men and women, and that recent phone calls appeared to trigger immediate changes in women's blood protein levels.
Narayanan SN, Kumar RS, Potu BK, Nayak S, Mailankot M · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to mobile phone signals (50 missed calls daily for 4 weeks) and then tested their ability to navigate a water maze to find a hidden platform. Phone-exposed rats took 3 times longer to find the target area and spent half as much time in the correct location compared to unexposed rats. This suggests mobile phone radiation may impair spatial memory and learning ability.
Luria R, Eliyahu I, Hareuveny R, Margaliot M, Meiran N. · 2009
Researchers had 48 men perform memory tasks while exposed to cell phone radiation on different sides of their heads. Left-side phone exposure significantly slowed right-hand reaction times during early testing, demonstrating that cell phone radiation can measurably affect brain function and cognitive performance.
Kumar RS, Sareesh NN, Nayak S, Mailankot M. · 2009
Rats exposed to cell phone radiation (900-1,800 MHz) for four weeks showed increased anxiety-like behavior in maze tests, exploring open areas less than unexposed rats. This suggests mobile phone radiation may affect brain function and stress responses in ways relevant to human health.
Wiholm C et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed participants to mobile phone radiation at 1.4 W/kg (similar to real phone use) for 2.5 hours while they performed spatial memory tasks on a computer. Surprisingly, people who reported symptoms from phone use actually performed better during radiation exposure, while those without symptoms showed no change. This unexpected finding challenges assumptions about how phone radiation affects brain function.
Söderqvist F, Carlberg M, Hansson Mild K, Hardell L · 2009
Researchers exposed 41 volunteers to cell phone radiation for 30 minutes and measured blood markers that indicate whether the blood-brain barrier (the protective shield around your brain) had been compromised. They found that one marker called transthyretin increased significantly after exposure, suggesting the radiation may have affected this critical barrier. This is concerning because a compromised blood-brain barrier could allow harmful substances to enter the brain more easily.
Pérez-Castejón C et al. · 2009
Spanish researchers exposed human brain cancer cells (astrocytoma) to pulsed microwave radiation at 9.6 GHz for various time periods up to 24 hours. They found that after 24 hours of exposure, the cancer cells showed significantly increased proliferation (growth and division) compared to unexposed cells, even at extremely low power levels. This suggests that microwave radiation may accelerate the growth of existing brain tumors.
Li X et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to microwave radiation at various power levels and found abnormal changes in a brain protein that regulates water balance in the hippocampus, the brain's memory center. Higher exposures caused persistent protein increases that didn't recover, suggesting potential blood-brain barrier damage.