| Literature DB >> 34298941 |
Dominique Belpomme1,2, George L Carlo3, Philippe Irigaray1,2, David O Carpenter2,4,5, Lennart Hardell2,6, Michael Kundi7, Igor Belyaev2,8, Magda Havas2,9, Franz Adlkofer10, Gunnar Heuser11, Anthony B Miller12, Daniela Caccamo13, Chiara De Luca14, Lebrecht von Klitzing15, Martin L Pall16, Priyanka Bandara17, Yael Stein18,19, Cindy Sage20, Morando Soffritti21,22, Devra Davis23, Joel M Moskowitz24, S M J Mortazavi25,26, Martha R Herbert27, Hanns Moshammer7,28, Gerard Ledoigt2, Robert Turner29,30, Anthony Tweedale31, Pilar Muñoz-Calero32, Iris Udasin33, Tarmo Koppel34, Ernesto Burgio2, André Vander Vorst2,35.
Abstract
Clinical research aiming at objectively identifying and characterizing diseases via clinical observations and biological and radiological findings is a critical initial research step when establishing objective diagnostic criteria and treatments. Failure to first define such diagnostic criteria may lead research on pathogenesis and etiology to serious confounding biases and erroneous medical interpretations. This is particularly the case for electrohypersensitivity (EHS) and more particularly for the so-called "provocation tests", which do not investigate the causal origin of EHS but rather the EHS-associated particular environmental intolerance state with hypersensitivity to man-made electromagnetic fields (EMF). However, because those tests depend on multiple EMF-associated physical and biological parameters and have been conducted in patients without having first defined EHS objectively and/or endpoints adequately, they cannot presently be considered to be valid pathogenesis research methodologies. Consequently, the negative results obtained by these tests do not preclude a role of EMF exposure as a symptomatic trigger in EHS patients. Moreover, there is no proof that EHS symptoms or EHS itself are caused by psychosomatic or nocebo effects. This international consensus report pleads for the acknowledgement of EHS as a distinct neuropathological disorder and for its inclusion in the WHO International Classification of Diseases.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; diagnostic criteria; electrohypersensitivity; electromagnetic field; extremely low frequency; imaging techniques; pathophysiological mechanism; provocation test; radiofrequency
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34298941 PMCID: PMC8304862 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22147321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1EHS/MCS physiopathological model based on low-grade neuroinflammation and oxidative/nitrosative stress-induced blood–brain barrier disruption, according to Reference [9].
Some methodological defects that make provocation tests unsuitable for sham versus EMF exposure analysis in EHS-bearing patients.
| 1 | Lack of precise inclusion criteria. No objective criteria based on molecular biomarkers and imaging techniques. | [ |
| 2 | No clear consideration on medical anamnesis and degree of EHS severity. | [ |
| 3 | No consideration for an association with MCS. | [ |
| 4 | No consideration that EHS patients are intolerant to specific man-made waves frequencies. | [ |
| 5 | Too short exposure duration. | [ |
| 6 | Symptom recording made too early. | [ |
| 7 | Endpoint criteria depending on subjective statements. | [ |
| 8 | Possible EHS-associated psychological conditioning due to past suffering. | [ |
| 9 | Possible abnormal EMF signal transmission in case of sham exposure. | [ |