| Literature DB >> 29502514 |
Wei-Jia Zhi1, Li-Feng Wang2, Xiang-Jun Hu3.
Abstract
This study concerns the effects of microwave on health because they pervade diverse fields of our lives. The brain has been recognized as one of the organs that is most vulnerable to microwave radiation. Therefore, in this article, we reviewed recent studies that have explored the effects of microwave radiation on the brain, especially the hippocampus, including analyses of epidemiology, morphology, electroencephalograms, learning and memory abilities and the mechanisms underlying brain dysfunction. However, the problem with these studies is that different parameters, such as the frequency, modulation, and power density of the radiation and the irradiation time, were used to evaluate microwave radiation between studies. As a result, the existing data exhibit poor reproducibility and comparability. To determine the specific dose-effect relationship between microwave radiation and its biological effects, more intensive studies must be performed.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Dysfunction of learning and memory abilities; Microwave
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29502514 PMCID: PMC5607572 DOI: 10.1186/s40779-017-0139-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mil Med Res ISSN: 2054-9369
Source and frequency range of microwave
| Application | Frequency range (MHz) |
|---|---|
| FM radio and TV broadcasting antennas | 80–800 |
| Mobile phones | 453.5–1980.0 |
| Mobile phone base station | 463.5–2170.0 |
| Microwave links | 1000 |
| Cordless phones | 1880–1900 |
| Terrestrial trunked radio | 380–470 |
| Bluetooth devices | 2450 |
| Baby monitors | 40, 446, 864, 1900 and 2450 |
| Wireless local area networks | 2400 and 5000 |
| Smart meters | 900–1900 or 2400 |
| Surgical and physiotherapeutic | 2450 |
| Diathermy | 2450 and 434 |
| Microwave ovens | 915–2450 |
| Radar | 30–300,000 |
Epidemiological studies of microwaves
| Item | Reference | Sample/Model | Exposure condition | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Occupational exposure | Dasdag et al. 1992 | Workers in TV transmitting station and medium wave broadcasting station | Frequency ranging between 202 and 209, 694–701, 750–757, 774–781 and 1062 MHz | Suffered from many illnesses |
| Dasdag et al. 1994 | Workers in TV transmitting station and medium wave broadcasting station | Frequency ranging between 202 and 209, 694–701, 750–757, 774–781 and 1062 MHz | Showed significant psychiatric signs | |
| Dasdag et al. 1999 | Radio-link technicians and other workers, working years of subjects were 10 to 22 years | 167 MHz, 420 MHz, 2 GHz and 6 GHZ with output powers of 200.0, 10.0, 1.5 and 4.0 watt, respectively | Fatigue, headache, irritability, loss of appetite, sleepiness and memory difficulties were observed, but there were no pathological findings | |
| Richter et al. 2002 | 5 young patients had brain tumors, 10 years of initial occupational exposures to radar | GHz range; 10-300 W | Incubation period shortened | |
| Szmigielski et al. 1996 | Military career personnel in Poland during a 15-year period (1971–1985) | Pulse-modulated microwaves at 150–3500 MHz) 2–6 W/m2 | Prevalence of brain cancer in each age group was higher | |
| Mobile phone exposure | Interphone study group. 2010 | Regular mobile phone user | Mobile phones | No increase in risk of glioma or meningioma was observed. An increased isk of glioma at the highest exposure levels was observed, but biases and error prevent a causal interpretation |
| Larjabaara et al. 2011 | Regular mobile phone user | Mobile phones | Gliomas are not preferentially located in parts of the brain with the highest exposure | |
| Hardell et al. 2011 | 2708 glioma and 2409 meningioma cases | Mobile phones | No increased risk | |
| Carlberg et al. 2013 | Brain tumor cases of both genders aged 18–75 years and diagnosed during 2007–2009 | Mobile phones | No conclusive evidence of an association between use of mobile phones and cordless phones and meningioma | |
| Mortazavi et al. | College students | 900 MHz GSM mobile phone; 10 min | Visual reaction time decreased | |
| Koivisto et al. 2000 | Healthy humans | 902 MHz electromagnetic field emitted by cellular telephones | Reaction time reduction | |
| Preece et al. 2009 | Humans | 915 MHz | Improvement of cognitive function | |
| Koivisto et al. 2000 | Healthy subjects | 902 MHz electromagnetic field emitted by GSM phones | Improvement of working memory | |
| Edelstyn et al. 2002 | Healthy subjects | Electromagnetic field emitted by a 900 MHz mobile phone for 30 min | Improvement of attentional capacity and processing speed | |
| Smythe et al. 2003 | Male and female subjects | Mobile phones | Spatial learning ability were improved in males but not in females | |
| Effects on children | Otto et al. 2007 | Children | Mobile phones | Microwaves encountered in common life are most likely not a priority issue in children’s environmental health |
| Aydin et al. 2011 | 352 families of brain tumor patients in 7–19 years old adolescents and 646 matched controls | Mobile phones | Non-significantly increased OR value | |
| Lee et al. 2001 | Adolescents | Electromagnetic field emitted by mobile phones | Mild facilitating effect on attention functions |
The influence of microwave radiation on learning and memory
| Item | Reference | Method | Sample/Model | Exposure condition | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Negative effects | Sareesh et al. 2009 | MWM | Male Wistar rats (10–12 weeks old) | 50 missed calls/day for 4 weeks from a GSM (900/1800 MHz) mobile phone in vibratory mode (no ring tone) | Mobile phone exposure affected the acquisition of learned responses in Wistar rats |
| Wang et al. 2013 | MWM | Male Wistar rats | 2.856 GHz pulsed microwave field for 6 min (unexposed, 5, 10 and 50 mW/cm2) | 10 and 50 mW/cm2 displayed significant deficits inspatial learning and memory | |
|
| 12 radial-arm maze | Rats | Exposure to pulsed 2450 MHz microwaves for 45 min | Deficit in spatial “working memory” function | |
| Neutral effects | Cassel et al. 2004 | 12 radial-arm maze | Rats | 2.45 GHz microwaves (500 pps, pulse width = 2 μs, average whole body SAR = 0.6 W/kg for 45 min) | Microwave-induced behavioral alterations measured by Lai had more to do with factors related to performance bias than to spatial working memory |
| Cosquer et al. 2005 | 12 radial-arm maze | Rats | Whole-body exposure to 2.45 GHz electromagnetic fields | Radial-arm maze performance in rats did not changed | |
| Cobb et al. 2004 | 12 radial-arm maze | Rats | 45 min exposure to 2450 MHz fields at whole body SARs of 0.6 W/kg (500pps, pulse width = 2 μs); pre-exposure injection of one of three psychoactive compounds or saline | Exposure to microwave radiation did not cause decrements in the ability of rats to learn the spatial memory task |
GSM Global system for mobile communication, MWM Millimeter wave mixer