Unknown authors · 1978
This 1978 study exposed rhesus monkeys to extremely powerful 20,000 gauss magnetic fields and monitored their vital signs, brain activity, and blood chemistry. The research found no measurable effects on heart rate, blood pressure, brain responses, or blood cell counts. This represents one of the earliest systematic investigations into high-intensity magnetic field exposure in primates.
M. O'Donnell, J. W. Mimbs, B. E. Sobel, J. G. Miller · 1977
Researchers measured how ultrasound waves pass through heart muscle tissue at different temperatures and time periods after removal from animals. They found that ultrasound absorption in heart tissue decreases by about 20% as temperature increases from room temperature to body temperature. The tissue remained stable for 4 hours at cool temperatures but showed changes at warmer temperatures.
D. R. McNiven, D. J. Wyper · 1976
Researchers tested different therapies on human muscle blood flow and found microwave therapy dramatically increased circulation by nearly 300% (from 2.9 to 11.4 ml/100g/min). Other treatments like infrared, ice, massage, and electromagnetic therapy showed no significant effects. This demonstrates microwaves have unique biological effects on human circulation.
Dave Vanas · 1976
This 1976 review by Trapeano examined Soviet research on health effects from ultrahigh voltage power lines, focusing on organ, blood, and nerve damage in workers exposed to electrical fields. The study analyzed occupational exposure data from switchyards and high-voltage installations. This early research helped establish the foundation for understanding power line health risks decades before widespread public concern.
Elmqvist H · 1976
This 1976 study examined how electromagnetic interference from various external sources affects the function of cardiac pacemakers. Researchers identified common interference sources and described their effects on these life-sustaining medical devices. The findings highlight how electromagnetic fields can disrupt critical medical equipment that millions of people depend on.
McRee DI · 1976
This 1976 study examined potential microwave injuries in clinical medicine, focusing on biological effects from medical microwave applications like diathermy treatments and electromagnetic interference with devices like cardiac pacemakers. The research addressed safety concerns about therapeutic microwave use and device malfunctions in medical settings.
Charles E. Tinney, James L. Lords, Carl H. Durney · 1976
Researchers exposed isolated turtle hearts to 960 MHz microwave radiation and found it caused the heart rate to slow down (bradycardia) at specific power levels between 2-10 mW/g. This effect appeared to work through nerve pathways rather than simple heating, since higher power levels that caused heating actually increased heart rate instead.
Terry O. Steiner · 1975
Researchers in 1975 developed a specialized monitoring system to test how radio frequency fields affect cardiac pacemakers. The system used fiber optic technology to isolate the pacemaker during testing while continuously monitoring its output and simulating normal heart activity. This was groundbreaking work establishing methods to evaluate pacemaker safety in electromagnetic environments.
Richard D. Phillips et al. · 1975
Researchers exposed rats to 2,450 MHz microwave radiation (the same frequency as microwave ovens) for 30 minutes at different power levels. Higher exposures caused dangerous heart rhythm problems, body temperature disruption, and metabolic changes that lasted for hours after exposure ended.
Larsen JP, Eriksen T · 1975
This 1975 medical case study documented burn injuries that occurred when diathermy equipment (which uses radiofrequency energy for medical heating) was used simultaneously with electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring. The research examined how combining these two medical devices created dangerous electrical interactions that resulted in patient burns.
DETLEF ROHL et al. · 1975
Researchers tested 16 cardiac pacemakers against powerful radar radiation in 1975, finding all devices showed interference at power levels between 0.025-62.5 mW/cm². Three of six implanted pacemakers malfunctioned when exposed to radar beams from 1.2 kilometers away, but modified pacemakers with special filtering remained protected even at extremely high exposure levels.
Przemyslaw CZERSKI, Stanislaw SZMIGIELSKI · 1975
This 1975 research review analyzed microwave radiation effects on biological systems through animal experiments and human occupational studies. The study found that high-dose microwave exposure causes heating effects, while chronic low-dose exposure produces unexplained effects on the nervous system and blood formation that can't be explained by heating alone. This early research highlighted gaps in understanding microwave health effects that remain relevant today.
D. Melville, F. Paul, S. Roath · 1975
This 1975 research by Melville explored using magnetic fields to directly separate red blood cells from whole blood, investigating how hemoglobin's magnetic properties could enable blood cell isolation. The study examined magnetic separation techniques that could potentially be used for medical or research applications involving blood component analysis.
A.S. HYDE, J.J. FRIEDMAN · 1975
This 1975 study exposed mice to 3 cm and 10 cm microwave radiation to examine effects on body weight and blood cell counts. Researchers found measurable biological changes from both acute single exposures and chronic repeated exposures, though the study acknowledges difficulty in precisely measuring how much microwave energy actually penetrated the animals' tissues.
P. E. Hamrick, J. G. Zinkl · 1975
Researchers exposed rabbit red blood cells to microwave radiation at 2450 and 3000 MHz to test whether it would change cell membrane permeability and fragility. The study found no significant differences between exposed and control cells in either potassium leakage or osmotic resistance, contradicting earlier reports of microwave effects on blood cells.
L. Birenbaum et al. · 1975
Researchers exposed unanesthetized rabbits to 2.4 GHz microwave radiation at various power levels up to 80 mW/cm², measuring heart rate, breathing, and body temperature. All three biological responses increased with higher microwave power levels, with breathing rate showing the most dramatic changes - increasing 20 times more than heart rate. The study demonstrates that microwave exposure at frequencies similar to modern wireless devices can trigger measurable physiological stress responses in living mammals.
Nicholas P. DrSmyth et al. · 1974
This 1974 research examined how electromagnetic interference from various sources could affect cardiac pacemaker function in patients. The study explored the electromagnetic environment that pacemaker patients encounter in daily life and potential device malfunctions from EMF exposure. This early work helped establish safety protocols for pacemaker patients around electromagnetic sources.
Koerner DR · 1974
This 1974 study examined workplace safety concerns for employees with cardiac pacemakers exposed to electromagnetic interference. The research addressed how various electromagnetic sources in occupational settings could potentially interfere with pacemaker function. This represents early recognition that EMF exposure posed unique risks for people with implanted medical devices.
V. M. Koldaev · 1974
Soviet researchers exposed albino mice to intense microwave radiation (62 milliwatts per square centimeter) both acutely for 11 minutes and chronically for 20 days. They found that the drug cordiamine increased survival rates by 50% in both exposure scenarios, while ephedrine provided no protection.
Przemysław CZERSKI · 1974
This 1974 study exposed laboratory animals to long-term, low-level microwave radiation and found significant changes in their blood-forming systems. The research revealed increased lymphocytes (white blood cells), DNA damage in blood cells, and chromosomal abnormalities - but only in certain cell types. These findings suggest microwave exposure can selectively target specific blood cell populations.
W. D. SKIDMORE, S. J. BAUM · 1974
Researchers exposed rodents to 100 million pulses of extremely high-intensity electromagnetic radiation over 38 weeks, using field strengths thousands of times higher than typical human exposure. Despite some minor changes in blood cell production, the study found no significant health effects, chromosomal damage, or increased cancer rates in the exposed animals.
Todorov, N., Draganov, Y. · 1974
Researchers exposed rabbits to pulsed ultrahigh frequency electromagnetic fields (30 watts for 5 minutes) directed at their brain area and measured blood cholesterol levels. They found cholesterol spiked one hour after exposure, dropped below normal at two hours, then returned to baseline by three hours. This demonstrates that EMF exposure can trigger rapid biochemical changes in the cardiovascular system.
Mitchell JC, Hurt WD, Walters WH · 1974
This 1974 research examined how radiofrequency electromagnetic fields interfere with cardiac pacemakers, documenting real-world interference patterns that could disrupt these life-saving devices. The study provided early empirical evidence of EMF interference with medical implants, establishing the foundation for modern pacemaker safety protocols and EMF exposure guidelines.
Donald R. Koerner, M.D. · 1974
This 1974 medical study examined electromagnetic interference risks for employees with cardiac pacemakers in workplace environments. The research focused on occupational exposures from sources like microwave equipment and diathermy devices that could potentially disrupt pacemaker function. This represents early recognition that electromagnetic fields could interfere with medical devices.
R. V. RAJOTTE et al. · 1974
Researchers in 1974 successfully used 2450 MHz microwave energy to thaw frozen fetal mouse hearts that had been preserved in liquid nitrogen. The microwave thawing method allowed the hearts to maintain their electrical activity after being frozen, which was important for organ preservation research. This study explored microwave heating as a controlled way to uniformly thaw biological tissues.