| Literature DB >> 30445985 |
Kavindra Kumar Kesari1, Ashok Agarwal2, Ralf Henkel3.
Abstract
During recent years, an increasing percentage of male infertility has to be attributed to an array of environmental, health and lifestyle factors. Male infertility is likely to be affected by the intense exposure to heat and extreme exposure to pesticides, radiations, radioactivity and other hazardous substances. We are surrounded by several types of ionizing and non-ionizing radiations and both have recognized causative effects on spermatogenesis. Since it is impossible to cover all types of radiation sources and their biological effects under a single title, this review is focusing on radiation deriving from cell phones, laptops, Wi-Fi and microwave ovens, as these are the most common sources of non-ionizing radiations, which may contribute to the cause of infertility by exploring the effect of exposure to radiofrequency radiations on the male fertility pattern. From currently available studies it is clear that radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMF) have deleterious effects on sperm parameters (like sperm count, morphology, motility), affects the role of kinases in cellular metabolism and the endocrine system, and produces genotoxicity, genomic instability and oxidative stress. This is followed with protective measures for these radiations and future recommendations. The study concludes that the RF-EMF may induce oxidative stress with an increased level of reactive oxygen species, which may lead to infertility. This has been concluded based on available evidences from in vitro and in vivo studies suggesting that RF-EMF exposure negatively affects sperm quality.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30445985 PMCID: PMC6240172 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-018-0431-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 5.211
Fig. 1Diagrammatic representation of various source of RF EMF exposure effect on brain and testicular organ and deleterious outcome
Studies on Reproduction: In vitro & In vivo
| Subject/ species | Exposure Parameters | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male swiss albino mice, n = 8 | 902.4 MHz 4 h/ 8 h/ day for 35 days; SAR 0.0516 W/kg | Significant increase in abnormal cells, spermatogonia and decreased spermatids. Significant histological changes in seminiferous tubules. Significant increase in DNA damage of both 4 & 8 h exposure. | Pandey et al. 2017 [ |
| Sprague Dawley male rats, | 900 MHz mobile phone frequency; 1 h/ day for 30 days; SAR 0.025 W/kg | Significant increase in apoptosis and changes in the levels of SOD, GPx, CAT, LPO. Cincludes that 900 MHz could alter histology, the oxidative status and apoptosis induction in testes. | Odaci and Ozyilmaz 2016 [ |
| Human spermatozoa (in vitro), | 850 MHz continuous for 1 h; SAR 1.46 W/kg | In group 1 of normal sperm, the gene and protein expression of clusterin and DNA fragmentation were increased significantly in EMF exposed sperm. Concluded detrimental effect of mobile phone on sperm parameters. | Zalata et al. 2015 [ |
| Human spermatozoa (in vitro), | 900–1800 MHz; intermittent every 10 min for 5 h; | Significantly increase in DNA fragmentation and non-progressive motility and reduction in progressive motility in exposed sperm. | Gorpinchenko et al. 2014 [ |
| Male Wistar rats, | 2.45 GHz/0.14 W/Kg (2 h a day for 45 days) | A significant increase in DNA SB, protein carbonyl content, ROS, XO, MDA apoptosis and significant decrease in testosterone, LDH-X were observed in microwave exposed group. A treatment with melatonin prevent oxidative damage in all above parameters. | Meena et al. 2014 [ |
| Male Wistar rats, n = 6 | 1910.5 MHz/ 1.34 W/kg 60 days, two hours each day (6 days a week) | Significant decrease in sperm count, seminiferous diameter, testicular weight and increase in DNA single strand break and MDA level. | Kumar et al. 2014 [ |
| Male Male Wistar rats, n = 6 in each group | GSM 900 MHz/ 0.9 W/Kg (2 h/day for 45 days | Decrease sperm count, increased apoptosis, micronuclei and ROS. Affect the level of antioxidant enzymes and testosterone level. Morphological changes also observed under TEM. | Kesari et al. 2011, Kesari and Behari 2012 [ |
| Male Wistar rats, n = 3 each group | 2.45GHz/ 0.014 W/Kg (2 h/day for 60 days). PEMF 100 Hz | Decreased melatonin, testosterone and increased creatine kinase, capases significantly in exposed group. PEMF showed therapeutic impact against microwave exposure. | Kumar et al. 2011 [ |
| Male Wistar Rats, n = 6 each group | 10GHz/ flux density 0.21 mW/cm2/ SAR: 0.014 W/kg/ Continuous 2 h/day for 45 days | Significant increase in ROS level, apoptotic cells and decrease in percentage of G2 phase /mitosis phase of cell cycle and histone kinase enzyme activity. | Kumar et al. 2011 [ |
| Male Wistar rats, n = 6 | 2.45GHz/ 0.11 W/Kg (2 h/day for 35 days) | Significant decrease in sperm count, changes in antioxidant enzyme (SOD, GPx, CAT) and DNA fragmentation exceed to cell apoptosis. | Kesari and Behari 2010 [ |
| Male Wistar rats, n = 6 | RF-EMR 900/ 0.9 W/kg (2 h/ day for 35 days) | Statistically significant reduction in Protein Kinase C activity, sperm count and increased apoptotic sperm cells. | Kesari et al. 2010 [ |
| Male Albino Wistar rat | 900 MHz GSM (60 min/day for 3 months) | Long term mobile phone radiation exposure leads to reduction in serum testosterone level | Meo et al. 2010 [ |
| Human semen | RF-EMR 850 MHz/ 1.46 W/kg. (for 60 min) | Motility & viability significantly decreased, increased in ROS level, decreased in ROS-TAC score | Agarwal et al. (2009) [ |
| Male Albino Wistar rat | GSM 0.9 & 1.8 GHz/ SAR-? (1 h/day for 28 days) | Reduced % of motile sperm. Increase LPx, GSH content of testis and epididymis. | Mailankot et al. |
| Human Spermatozoa | 71.8 GHz/ 0.4–27.5 W/Kg (exposure time 16 h). | Both [power density and frequency range enhance mitochondrial ROS in human spermatozoa leads to decrease in motility and viability and cause DNA fragmentation | De Iuliis et al. 2009 [ |
| Sprague Dawley rats | RF-EMR 1.9 Hz @ distance of 1 cm for 6 h/day × 18 weeks | Significant decrease in sperm motility also majority of sperm cells in the exposure group were dead, where as in the control group the majority were alive with constant, active motility | Yan et al. 2007 [ |
Studies reporting from our group on sperm parameters after RF EMF exposure to male subject. The studies indicated by arrow in table are either significant increase or decrease in given endpoints
| Reference | RF-EMF | Sperm Count | Sperm morphology | Sperm Motility | Sperm cell cycle | Testosterone | ROS | Comment/ Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kumar et al. [ | Microwaves 10 GHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/45d | |||
| Kesari et al. [ | Mobile phone 900 MHz | ↓ | ↑ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/35d | ||||
| Agarwal et al. [ | RF-EMR 850 MHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | Human semen | |||
| Meena et al. [ | Microwaves 2.45 GHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/45d | ||
| Kumar et al. [ | 3G mobile phone | ↓ | ↓ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/60d | ||||
| Kesari & Behari [ | Mobile phone 900 MHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | Wistar rat 2 h/d/45d | ||
| Kumar et al. [ | Microwaves 2.45 GHz | ↓ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/60d | |||||
| Kumar et al. [ | Microwaves 10 GHz | ↓ | ↑ | Male Wistar rat, 2 h/d/45d | ||||
| Kesari and Behari 2010a,b [ | Microwaves 2.45 & 50 GHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | Male Wistar rat 2 h/d/45d | |||
| Agarwal et al. [ | RF-EMR 850 MHz | ↓ | ↑ | Human semen | ||||
| Kesari et al. [ | Mobile phone 900 MHz | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | Male Wistar rat, 2 h/d/35d |
Fig. 2An overview on the effects of RF EMF exposure, emitting from various sources (cell phone, microwave oven, Wi-Fi, Laptop) on genotoxic parameters. The proposed mechanism suggesting radiation-induced oxidative damage may increase DNA damage, micronuclei formation and leading cancer progression. This has been linked to distorted sperm head and mitochondrial sheath in sperm tail which leads to apoptosis and finally cancer progression