| Literature DB >> 21266038 |
Sabine J Regel1, Peter Achermann.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The steady increase of mobile phone usage has led to a rising concern about possible adverse health effects of radio frequency electromagnetic field (RF EMF) exposure at intensities even below the existing safety limits. Accumulating evidence suggests that pulse-modulated RF EMF may alter brain physiology. Yet, whereas effects on the human electroencephalogram in waking and sleep have repeatedly been shown in recent years, results on cognitive performance are inconsistent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21266038 PMCID: PMC3041732 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-10-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
RF EMF effects on cognitive performance in studies with a within-subject design.
| Study | RF EMF Exposure | Experimental Design | Cognitive Task(s) | Results | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameters | Side | Duration | Sample | Handedness | Blinding | Cond | Duration | Practice | When | |||
| Aalto et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 51 | 12 M | R | DB | C | 1 | - | - | D | n.s. |
| Cinel et al. | a) 888 MHz GSM, | |||||||||||
| L+R | ~45 | 44 M, | - | DB | ✓ | 5 | ~40 | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| L+R | ~40 | 52 M, | - | DB | ✓ | 3 | ~35 | ✓ | D | ↓ RT (Stroop Task, | ||
| Croft et al. | 900 MHz (217 Hz), | PC | 20 | 16 M, | R (20) | SB | C | 1 | 3 | - | D | n.s. |
| Curcio et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 45 | EG1: | R | DB | ✓ | 4 | ~22 | ✓ | EG1: D | ↑ Speed (Acoustic |
| SAR = 0.5 W/kg | EG2: | EG2: A | ↑ Speed to targets | |||||||||
| Curcio et al. | 902.40 MHz (217 Hz), | R | 15 | 12 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 2 | 10 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| Eliyahu et al. | 890.2 MHz, | L+R | ~120 | 36 M | R | SB | - | 4 | ~120 | ✓ | D | ↑ RT with left hand (left |
| Freude et al. | 916.2 MHz (217 Hz), | |||||||||||
| L | - | 20 M | R | SB | C | 1 | - | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| L | - | 19 M | R | SB | C | 3 | - | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| Haarala et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | ~45 | 14 M | R | DB | C | 4 | - | - | D | n.s. |
| Haarala et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | |||||||||||
| L | ~65 | 16 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 9 | ~65 | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| L | ~65 | 16 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 9 | ~65 | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| Haarala et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | |||||||||||
| L | ~65 | 16 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 4 | ~65 | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| L | ~65 | 16 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 4 | ~65 | ✓ | D | n.s. | ||
| Haarala et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | ~50 | 16 B, | R | DB | ✓ | 8 | ~50 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| Haarala et al. | a) 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L+R | ~90 | 48 M | R | DB | ✓ | 9 | ~45 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| a) b) SAR1 g = 1.1 W/kg | ||||||||||||
| Hamblin et al. | 894.6 MHz (217 Hz), | R | 60 | 4 M, | R | SB | ✓ | 3 | ~30 | ✓ | D | ↑ RT (Auditory Oddball |
| Hamblin et al. | 895 MHz (217 Hz), | R+L | 30 | 46 M, | R (108) | DB | ✓ | 3 | 15 | ✓ | D | n.s. (one result not |
| Hinrichs | 1870 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 30 | 2 M, | - | DB | ✓ | 1 | 10 | - | D | n.s. |
| Jech et al. | 900 MHz (2, 8, | R | 45 | 9 M, | R (20) | DB | ✓ | 1 | 12.5 | - | D | ↓ RT to targets |
| Keetley et al. | 0.25 W mean power | L | 60 | 58 M, | - | DB | ✓ | 8 | ~30 | - | B, D | ↓ Performance variable |
| ↓ Performance (TMT A), | ||||||||||||
| Kleinlogel et al. | a) 900 MHz (GSM, 2, | L | 30 | 15 M | R | DB | ✓ | 1 | 11 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| Koivisto et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 30 | 24 M, | R | SB | C | 4 | ~30 | ✓ | D | ↓ RT to targets (3-Back |
| Koivisto et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 60 | 24 M, | R | SB | ✓ | 12 | ~60 | ✓ | D | ↓ RT (Simple RT Task) |
| Krause et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | R | 30 | 8 M, 8 F | R | SB | C | 1 | ~30 | - | D | n.s. |
| Krause et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | R | 30 | 12 M, | R | SB | C | 3 | ~30 | - | D | n.s. |
| Krause et al. | 902 MHz (217 Hz), | L | 30 | 12 M, | R | DB | C | 1 | ~30 | - | D | ↑ Error rates (mean |
| Krause et al. | a) 902 MHz (217 Hz) | |||||||||||
| L+R | 2 × ~27 | 36 M | R | DB | ✓ | 1 | ~27 | - | D | n.s. | ||
| L+R | 2 × ~40 | 36 M | R | DB | ✓ | 4 | ~40 | - | D | n.s. | ||
| Preece et al. | a) 915 MHz (217 Hz), | |||||||||||
| L | ~25-30 | 9 M, | R (14) | DB | ✓ | 10 | - | ✓ | D | ↓ RT (Choice RT Task) | ||
| L | ~25-30 | 9 M, | R (16) | DB | ✓ | 10 | - | ✓ | D | ↓ RT (Choice RT Task) | ||
| Preece et al. | 902 MHz, | L | 30 | 9 B, | - | DB | ✓ | 16 | 30-35 | ✓ | D | n.s. (after Bonferroni |
| Regel et al. | a) 900 MHz (2, 8, 217, | L | 30 | 24 M | R | DB | ✓ | 5 | 15 | ✓ | D | ↓ Speed (2-, 3-Back |
| Regel et al. | 900 MHz (2, 8, 217, | L | 30 | 15 M | R | DB | ✓ | 5 | 15 | ✓ | D | ↓ Speed (1-Back Task, |
| Rodina et al. | 450 MHz (7 Hz), | R | 8 × 5-7 | 4 M, | L+R | SB | C | 1 | 3-5 | ✓ | D | ↑ Errors (Visual |
| Russo et al. | a) 888 MHz GSM, | a) b) | 35-40 | a) b) 84 | - | DB | ✓ | 4 | ~35-40 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| Schmid et al. | 1970 MHz (5 MHz), | L | - | 29 M, | - | DB | C | 4 | - | ✓ | D | n.s. |
| Terao et al. | 800 MHz (50 Hz), | R | 30 | 9 M, | R | DB | ✓ | 1 | 6-7 | ✓ | B, A | n.s. |
| Unterlechner et al. | 1970 MHz (5 MHz), | L | - | 20 M, | R | DB | C | 4 | ~30 | ✓ | D | n.s. |
Study: * Experiments on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF); ** Experiments on event related potentials (ERP)
RF EMF Exposure: (av/ps) SAR: (average/peak spatial) specific absorption rate; L: left side exposure; R: right side exposure; L+R: left and right side exposure; PC: exposure over posterior cortex; GSM: Global System for Mobile Communications; UMTS: Universal Mobile Telecommunications System; CW: continuous wave (carrier frequency only)
Experimental Design: M: males; F: females; B: boys; G: girls; Handedness: R: right handed, L: left handed, A: ambidextrous; SB: single blind; DB: double blind; Cond: exposure conditions applied ≥24 h apart; C: exposure conditions applied consecutively; EG: experimental group
Cognitive Tasks: No: number of tasks applied; B: task applied before exposure; D: task applied during exposure; A: task applied after exposure; RT: reaction times
Results: ↑: significant increase; ↓: significant decrease; n.s.: no significant effect (compared to sham)
✓: accomplished; - not accomplished/specified
RF EMF effects on cognitive performance in studies with a between-group design.
| Study | RF EMF Exposure | Experimental Design | Cognitive Task(s) | Results | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameters | Side | Duration | Sample | Handedness | Blinding | No | Duration | Practice | Time | ||||
| Bessett et al. | 900 MHz (217 Hz), | L+R | 120/day | EG: | CG: | R (47) | DB | 22 | ~120 | - | B, D, | n.s. | |
| Edelstyn & | 900 MHz, | L | 30 | EG: | CG: | R | SB | 6 | ~8 | - | B, A | After 15 min exposure: | |
| ↑ Verbal memory | |||||||||||||
| ↓ Visuospatial working | |||||||||||||
| ↑ Sustained attention/↓ | |||||||||||||
| Fritzer et al. | 900 MHz (2, 8, | T | 405- | EG: | CG: | - | - | 7 | - | - | B, A | n.s. | |
| Lass et al. | 450 MHz (7 Hz), | R | 10-20 | EG: | CG: | - | SB | 3 | 10-20 | - | D | ↑ Variances of errors | |
| ↓ Errors (Visual Short | |||||||||||||
| ↑ Variances of errors | |||||||||||||
| Lee et al. | 1900 MHz | R | 30 | EG: | CG: | R | SB | 3 | ~25 | - | D | ↓ RT (Sustained | |
| Luria et al. | 890.2 MHz, | L+R | ~60 | EG1 | EG2 | CG | R | SB | 1 | ~5 | ✓ | D | ↑ RT with right hand (left |
| Smythe & | 1800 MHz, | L | 15 | EG1 | EG2 | EG3 | R | SB | 1 | 3 | - | D | ↑ Spatial accuracy in |
| Wiholm et al. | 884 MHz (GSM), | L | 150 | EG1: | EG2: | - | DB | 1 | - | - | B, A | ↓ Distance traveled in | |
RF EMF Exposure: (ps) SAR: (peak spatial) specific absorption rate; L: left side exposure; R: right side exposure; L+R: left and right side exposure; T: exposure of top of head; GSM: Global System for Mobile Communications
Experimental Design: EG: Experimental group; CG: Control group; M: males; F: females; Handedness: R: right handed, L: left handed; SB: single blind; DB: double blind
Cognitive Tasks: No: number of tasks applied; B: task applied before exposure; D: task applied during exposure; A: task applied after exposure; RT: reaction times
Results: ↑: significant increase; ↓: significant decrease; n.s.: no significant effect (compared to sham)
✓: accomplished; - not accomplished/specified
List of issues that need consideration when designing bioelectromagnetic studies on cognitive performance measures - Impact, importance and recommendations.
| Issue | Impact | Importance | Recommendation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Task type | Detection of effect | High | Use tasks which previously revealed effects and/or address the same cognitive variable (i.e. 'selective attention', 'working memory'); select task related to exposed brain region |
| Input and response modalities | Comparability between studies | Medium | Use modalities applied in tasks that previously revealed effects |
| Learning effects | Error variance and type II error | Medium | Include practice sessions; apply conditions in a crossover design; use parallel test forms or random or pseudo-random sequences |
| Task specificity | Detection of effect | High | Select task related to exposed brain region; if appropriate correct for multiple comparisonsa |
| Timing of tasks, task order and task duration | Development of effect; comparability between studies; alertness and motivation | High | Apply tasks with varying difficulty repeatedly in the same order; chose task difficulty and duration wisely to obviate fatigue and/or motivational loss |
| Study population and sample size | Effect size and significance; external validity | High | Run power analysis to get an indication of sufficiently large sample size; use homogeneous group for small sample sizes; apply proper matching procedures for two or more study groups; characterize study population |
| Handedness | Comparability between studies; homogeneity of study group(s) | Low to Mediumb | Include either right or left handers |
| Inclusion criteria and exclusion criteria | Detection of effect; comparability between studies; homogeneity of study group(s) | Medium to High | Define clear criteria prior and within a study according to the subject of investigation |
| Confounding factors | Error variance and type II error | High | Control for confounding factors as much as possible experimentally; apply randomization; check compliance of participants to predefined requirements |
| Experimental design and blinding | Detection of effect | High | Use within-subject, cross-over design if possible; double blinding is mandatory |
| Exposure conditions | Detection of effect; effect size and significance; interpretation | High | Ensure standardized reproducible exposure conditions; document setup and technical specifications (including signal characteristics); determine exposed brain areas |
| Field conditions and dosimetry | Interpretation | High | Use field intensities close to exposure limits; provide clear definition of field conditions; dosimetry and sham condition (no field) mandatory |
| Exposure duration and carryover effects | Interpretation; detection of effect | High | Allow for sufficient exposure duration; consider potential carryover effects in a crossover design; allow for sufficient time interval ('washout period') between conditions |
It must be noted that Table 3 contains generalized recommendations only and reflects the main issues which should be considered when designing a new study investigating RF EMF effects on mental processing; however, due to the complexity of each issue the recommendations may not fit all purposes by default. For a more elaborate discussion of each issue and the corresponding implications the reader is referred to the respective chapter of the review.
a A substantial sample size is needed to adequately perform such a correction; b of high importance when assessing motor reaction times with a cognitive task.