| Literature DB >> 28416002 |
Anne-Kathrin Petri1, Kristina Schmiedchen2, Dominik Stunder2, Dagmar Dechent2, Thomas Kraus2, William H Bailey3, Sarah Driessen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-voltage direct current (HVDC) lines are the technology of choice for the transport of large amounts of energy over long distances. The operation of these lines produces static electric fields (EF), but the data reviewed in previous assessments were not sufficient to assess the need for any environmental limit. The aim of this systematic review was to update the current state of research and to evaluate biological effects of static EF.Entities:
Keywords: Biological effects; Exposure; Field perception; High-voltage direct current; Physiological functions; Power line; Static electric fields
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28416002 PMCID: PMC5393013 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-017-0248-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Characteristics of individual human studies
| Author, year | Exposed body part (number of subjects) | Exposure | Endpoints | Outcome | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barron and Dreher [ | whole-body | static EF of 1 kV/m alone (? or combined with air ions?) for approximately 1 h | physiological/health-related effects: | no significant effect | also air ions tested; not clear if peer-reviewed, all subjects were pilots |
| Blondin et al. [ | whole-body | static EF of <10 to 50 kV/m alone or in combination with air ions; 7–11 s per trial (several 100 trials during 1 day) | field perception | median perception threshold 45.1 kV/m without ions; high ion densities lowered the median threshold to 36.9 kV/m | |
| Chapman et al. [ | arm | static EF of 30 to 65 kV/m; 7–11 s per trial (several 80 trials during 1 day) | field perception | subjects did not perceive static EF | also AC EF |
| Clairmont et al. [ | whole-body | static EF of −40 to 40 kV/m alone or combined with different AC EF | field perception | perception threshold of static EF 10–20 kV/m; simultaneous AC EF lowered the threshold | main focus was technical |
| Haupt and Nolfi [ | whole-body | static EF of approx. −16 to 21 kV/m and static MF of 22 μT of a HVDC line for at least 5 years | physiological/health-related effects: | no significant effect | cross-sectional epidemiological study |
| Odagiri-Shimizu and Shimizu [ | human arm ( | static EF up to 450 kV/m with variable humidity | field perception | average perception threshold approx. 250 kV/m at 90% relative humidity and approx. 375 kV/m at 50% relative humidity; awareness decreased threshold and shaving of the arm made it impossible to detect the field up to 450 kV/m | |
| Oftedal et al. [ | whole-body ( | static and AC EF and MF generated by visual display monitors, exposure for 2 weeks during work (at least 3 days/week, 2 h/day); average static EF of 2 kV/m without filter | physiological/health-related effects: | no significant effect | active and inactive filters nearly diminished static EF, but AC EF was only diminished by active filter; cross-over design |
| Skulberg et al. [ | whole-body | static and AC EF generated by visual display monitors, without antistatic measure (VDU treatment with ionic liquid) static EF up to 95 kV/m, median value up to 0.23 kV/m; mean exposure duration 6 h/day | physiological/health-related effects: | skin symptoms could be reduced; no significant effect regarding general symptoms and behavior |
Characteristics of individual vertebrate studies
| Author, year | Exposed animal (number of animals) | Exposure | Endpoints | Outcome | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altmann [ | guinea pig ( | static EF of 0.42 kV/m and control only under Faraday conditions | organ parameters: | metabolism was increased upon static EF exposure compared to a shielded environment in a Faraday cage | also studied AC EF; not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Altmann [ | white mouse, budgerigar and zebra finch, guinea pig ( | static EF of 1 kV/m (mouse, budgie, zebra finch (exposure duration regarding activity assessment was 1 h)), 0.42 kV/m (guinea pig); control only under Faraday conditions | perception/behavior: | increased activity accompanied by higher oxygen consumption in guinea pig and higher level of free amino acids in all examined animals compared to a shielded environment in a Faraday cage | not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Angell et al. [ | cattle ( | static EF of 5.6 kV/m (mean value) and static MF (mean value of 4.1 nA/m2) and air ions (mean value of 13 k ions/cm3) from a 500 kV HVDC line continuously for 30 months | reproduction/development: | no significant effect | experimental field study; same animals as in Ganskopp et al. [ |
| Arzruny et al. [ | rats ( | static EF of 200 kV/m for 1 h | hematology/immunology: | increase of enzyme activities in erythrocytes | |
| Atalay [ | 40 male guinea pigs (10 vertical, 10 horizontal, 20 control) | static EF of 1.9 kV/m (horizontal and vertical) for 9 h/day for 3 days | organ parameters: | increased hydroxyproline levels; vertical EF more effective than horizontal | |
| Atalay and Güler [ | 40 male guinea pigs (10 vertical, 10 horizontal, 20 control) | static EF of 0.58 kV/m (horizontal and vertical) for 9 h/day for 3 days | organ parameters: | decrease in hydroxyproline level; vertical EF more effective than horizontal | |
| Bailey and Charry [ | male Sprague–Dawley rats ( | negative and positive static EF (3 kV/m, 12 kV/m) partially with air ions (5 × 103/cm3, 5 × 105/cm3) for 2, 18, or 66 h | perception/behavior: | no significant effect | main focus was on air ions |
| Bailey and Charry [ | male Sprague–Dawley rats ( | negative and positive static EF of 3 kV/m without or with air ions (5*105/cm3) of the respective polarity; exposure duration 2, 18 or 66 h | brain/nervous system: | no significant effect | main focus was on air ions |
| Charry and Bailey [ | male Sprague–Dawley rats ( | negative and positive static EF of 3 kV/m without or with air ions (2*105/cm3) of the respective polarity; exposure duration 2, 18 or 66 h | brain/nervous system: | no significant effect | main focus was on air ions |
| Cieslar et al. [ | 128 male Wistar albino rats (4 groups, 32 animals, respectively: 3 different EF strengths and a control group; 8 animals per time point: after 14, 28, 56 d of exposure or 28 d after a 56 d exposure) | static EF of 16, 25, or 35 kV/m for 8 h/day for 14, 28, or 56 days | organ parameters and hematology/immunology: | transient changes in prooxidant-antioxidant balance | |
| Creim et al. [ | male Long Evans rats; 380 rats in total, in 9 different experiments ( | negative and positive static EF (−55 to 80 kV/m) with air ions (1.4*106) or -/+ 55 kV/m with different air ion concentrations (2*103 to 2.5*105) for 1 h | perception/behavior: | rats significantly avoided the exposed area (≥55 kV/m) regardless of air ions | |
| Creim et al. [ | male Long Evans rats; 56 rats in total, divided into 4 groups ( | negative and positive static EF of 75 kV/m with air ions (2*105) for 4 h/day for 5 days | perception/behavior: | no significant effect | |
| Fam [ | male and female ICR-SW mice (for exposure: 2 groups, male and female | static EF of 340 kV/m for 18–22 h/day, parents approx. 5000 h (approx. 30 weeks) in total and their progenies 2000 h in total | perception/behavior: | partially less water consumption; | |
| Ganskopp et al. [ | see Angell et al. 1990 [ | static EF of −3.3–24.7 kV/m under the positive conductor and −35.6–6.9 kV/m under the negative conductor | perception/behavior: | more time was spent for nursing and drinking; fewer exposed than control cattle were observed in the central areas of pens but still most of the animals in the central area | experimental field study; same animals as in Angell et al. [ |
| Gray et al. [ | female B6C3F1 mice implanted with murine mammary adenocarcinoma ( | static EF of 450 kV/m; mice in restraining tubes while exposed for 4 h/day for 13 days; all mice received the chemotherapeutic agent adriamycin | therapeutic approach: | greater tumor regression | also static MF and switching EF |
| Güler and Atalay [ | guinea pig ( | static EF of 1.9 kV/m for 9 h/day for 3 days (horizontal and vertical) | organ parameters: | increased hydroxyproline levels in liver, lungs and kidney; vertical EF more effective than horizontal | for liver, exactly the same values as in [ |
| Güler et al. [ | male guinea pig ( | static EF of 0.9 to 1.9 kV/m for 9 h/day for 3 days (vertical and horizontal) | organ parameters: | 0.9 kV/m vertical and horizontal EF decreased the amount of hydroxyproline in the liver, while the 1.9 kV/m vertical and horizontal EF increased the amount of hydroxyproline | for 1.9 kV/m exactly the same values as in [ |
| Güler et al. [ | male guinea pigs ( | static EF of 0.3, 0.9, and 1.8 kV/m for 8 h/day for 3 days (vertical and horizontal) | organ parameters: | 0.9 and 1.8 kV/m increased the lipid peroxidation and superoxide dismutase activity | |
| Güler et al. [ | male guinea pigs (280 animals in total, 14 groups with | static EF of 0.3, 0.6, 0.8, 0.9, 1, 1.35, 1.5, 1.8, and 1.9 kV/m for 8 h/day for 3 days (vertical) | organ parameters: | oxidative stress increased with increasing static EF strength | also studied AC EF; main focus was on developing a theoretic neural network |
| Güler et al. [ | male guinea pig ( | static EF of 0.3, 0.6, 0.8, 1, 1.35, 1.5, and 1.8 kV/m for 8 h/day for 3 days (vertical and horizontal) | organ parameters and hematology/immunology: | liver, kidney: significant increase of lipid peroxidation and SOD activity 1–1.8 kV/m; plasma: significant increase of lipid peroxidation and SOD activity 0.8–1.8 kV/m; lungs: significant increase of lipid peroxidation and SOD activity 1.35–1.8 kV/m; no difference between horizontal and vertical application of EF | also studied AC EF |
| Harutyunyan and Artsruni [ | female albino rats ( | static EF of 200 kV/m for 1 h or 6 h/day for 6 days | hematology/immunology: | increased lysozyme activity after 1 h and 6 h/day for 6 days; decrease of globular proteins coinciding with clotting acceleration after 1 h; attenuation of clotting-dependent proteome modifications reflected with incomplete coagulation after 6 h/day for 6 days | |
| Harutyunyan and Sahakyan [ | male albino rats ( | static EF of 200 kV/m for 1 h or 6 h/day for 6 days | hematology/immunology: | after 1 h exposure: reduced number of red blood cells, increased oxidative stress and increased enzyme activities; after 6 days: increased number of red blood cells, oxidative stress parameters decreased or increased | |
| Kato et al. [ | hindleg of anesthetized cats ( | static EF of 180–310 kV/m (both polarities) for 0.05, 0.2, 1.1, or 2 s for hair movement and for 1.5–3 min for action potential recording (sural nerve in 10 cats and sural, gastrocnemius, and articular nerves in 3 cats) | perception/behavior: | cat hairs were attracted to the upper electrode when exposed to static EF of 180 kV/m or more; afferent impulses were evoked from hair receptors that were probably stimulated by the hair movement; deeper receptors were not affected by the EF | |
| Kellogg and Yost [ | female NAMRU mice ( | static EF of 1.8 kV/m plus 2*103 air ions/cm3; static EF of 2.4 kV/m plus 2*105air ions/cm3; static EF of 2 kV/m (both polarities, respectively); 2 control groups; exposure started with approx. 6 weeks until end of life (except for 6 h every 2 weeks when cages were cleaned) | hematology/immunology: | no effect found between static EF alone versus control group | main focus was on air ions; extension of [ |
| Kellogg et al. [ | female NAMRU mice ( | static EF of 1.75 kV/m plus 2*103 air ions/cm3; static EF of 1.98 kV/m plus 2*105 air ions/cm3; static EF of 2 kV/m (both polarities, respectively); 2 control groups; exposure started with approx. 6 weeks until end of life (in this article only first year reported) | hematology/immunology: | increased mean glucose level in positive EF and decreased urea nitrogen in negative EF compared to overall mean values | main focus was on air ions; results for first year of a two year study, see [ |
| Kellogg et al. [ | see Kellogg et al. [ | see Kellogg et al. [ | hematology/immunology: | animals in static EF lived longer (no significance given) and increased mean glucose level in positive EF compared to overall mean value; no effect on organ weights | main focus was on air ions; results for second year of a two year study, see [ |
| Krueger et al. [ | NAMRU mice ( | static EF of ca. 0.1 kV/m (ion depleted air or with 2.7-5*103 air ions) or static EF of 4–6 kV/m (ion depleted air or with 2.3-5*105 air ions) for up to 11 days | hematology/immunology: | no significant effect | main focus was on air ions |
| Lott and McCain [ | male Sprague–Dawley rats (in total, | surface electrodes measured EEG ( | brain/nervous system: | increased brain activity measured with surface electrodes and decreased hypothalamic activity (implanted electrodes); when EF was turned off, brain activity returned back to baseline before exposure | |
| Marino et al. [ | female Swiss Ha/ICR mice ( | 2.7 kV/m and 10.7 kV/m (parallel to earth’s surface); 5.7 kV/m (perpendicular to the earth’s surface) for 7, 14, or 21 days | hematology/immunology: | beta globulin increased under parallel and decreased under perpendicular exposure; albumin vice versa; gamma globulin increased under perpendicular exposure | |
| Marino et al. [ | male Sprague–Dawley rats (7 different exposure groups with | rats: static vertical EF of 0.6, 2.8, 5.6, 19.7 kV/m and horizontal static EF of 0.3, 2.8, and 9.8 kV/m for 30 days; mice: horizontal static EF of 8–16 kV/m for 14 days | hematology/immunology (rats): | rats: secondary glaucoma (only vertical EF); altered serum protein concentration; no effects on organ histomorphology; mice: production of chromosomal abnormalities in tumor cells | |
| Mayyasi and Terry [ | King-Holtzman rats (in total, | static EF of 1.6 and 16 kV/m for 5 h | perception/behavior: | improved learning (less errors) and better swimming performance | |
| Mitchell et al. [ | female mice (Swiss Ha/ICR) ( | static EF in the range of 8 to 16 kV/m up to 15 weeks (horizontal and vertical) | genotoxicity: | increase in the percentage of abnormal chromosomes after 2 weeks of horizontal exposure; disappearance of the aberrant chromosomes after extended exposure | extension study of Marino et al. [ |
| Möse and Fischer [ | white mice ( | static EF of 23.8 kV/m for 15 days up to approx. 4 months (litter frequency) (mostly 15 to 20 days) | perception/behavior: | significant increase of locomotor activity, food and water consumption and rectal temperature; initially normal number of offspring, over the later period complete absence of offspring; no effect on oxygen consumption of liver pieces | not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Möse et al. [ | rat and guinea pig ( | static EF of 23.8 kV/m for 6 days | organ parameters and brain/nervous System: | reduced serotonin levels in brain and uterus, increased serotonin levels in ileum | not clear if peer-reviewed; contradictory statements if brain was taken from rats or guinea pigs |
| Möse et al. [ | rat (uterus) and guinea pig (intestine) ( | static EF of 23.8 kV/m for 3–21 days | organ parameters: | smooth muscles reacted less to stimulating drugs | not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Möse et al. [ | male NMRI mice ( | static EF of 23.8 kV/m for 8 days | organ parameters: | increased oxygen consumption under static EF exposure and decreased consumption under Faraday conditions in comparison to control group | not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Möse et al. [ | NMRI-Hahn mice ( | static EF of 0.04, 0.2, 1, 5 and 24 kV/m for 15 days; in addition to control group under laboratory conditions also control in Faraday cage; mice were immunized with sheep erythrocytes at day 7 and 11 of exposure | hematology/immunology: | immunization level increased under static EF exposure compared to a shielded environment in a Faraday cage | not clear if peer-reviewed |
| Okudan et al. [ | male and female Wistar rats (progenies of 3 dams, already exposed during pregnancy); ( | static EF of 10 kV/m for 28 days (14 days | organ parameters: | decrease in bone mineral content and bone mineral density | also studied AC EF |
| Sahakyan et al. [ | female rats ( | static EF of 200 kV/m for 6 h/day for 6 days | hematology/immunology: | redistribution of membrane surface charge, conformational alterations of membrane integral proteins, increase of the immersion degree of the peripheral proteins | incomplete reference list |
| Xu et al. [ | male ICR mice ( | static EF of 2.3–15.4 kV/m (experimental group 1) and 9.2–21.85 kV/m (experimental group 2) from a HVDC line for 35 days except for raining and low temperature days | brain/nervous System: | impaired memory abilities |
Fig. 1Flow diagram of literature search, eligibility and inclusion process. Adapted from Moher et al. [20]
Fig. 2Endpoints in human and vertebrate studies. The numeric values indicate the number of studies which examined the listed endpoints. Note that some animal studies examined two or more endpoints and are therefore listed more than once in the pie chart
Fig. 3Quality assessment for human studies. Risk of bias ratings for seven human experimental trials and one cross-sectional study. Criteria ratings served as basis for the assignment of individual studies to one out of three study quality categories (1st tier, 2nd tier, 3rd tier). Black frames indicate key risk of bias criteria
Fig. 4Quality assessment for animal studies. Risk of bias ratings for 40 experimental studies in vertebrates. Criteria ratings served as basis for the assignment of individual studies to one out of three study quality categories (1st tier, 2nd tier, 3rd tier). Black frames indicate key risk of bias criteria