| Literature DB >> 35057520 |
Ewelina K Wardzinski1, Kamila Jauch-Chara1, Sarah Haars1, Uwe H Melchert1, Harald G Scholand-Engler1, Kerstin M Oltmanns1.
Abstract
Obesity and mobile phone usage have simultaneously spread worldwide. Radio frequency-modulated electromagnetic fields (RF-EMFs) emitted by mobile phones are largely absorbed by the head of the user, influence cerebral glucose metabolism, and modulate neuronal excitability. Body weight adjustment, in turn, is one of the main brain functions as food intake behavior and appetite perception underlie hypothalamic regulation. Against this background, we questioned if mobile phone radiation and food intake may be related. In a single-blind, sham-controlled, randomized crossover comparison, 15 normal-weight young men (23.47 ± 0.68 years) were exposed to 25 min of RF-EMFs emitted by two different mobile phone types vs. sham radiation under fasting conditions. Spontaneous food intake was assessed by an ad libitum standard buffet test and cerebral energy homeostasis was monitored by 31phosphorus-magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements. Exposure to both mobile phones strikingly increased overall caloric intake by 22-27% compared with the sham condition. Differential analyses of macronutrient ingestion revealed that higher calorie consumption was mainly due to enhanced carbohydrate intake. Measurements of the cerebral energy content, i.e., adenosine triphosphate and phosphocreatine ratios to inorganic phosphate, displayed an increase upon mobile phone radiation. Our results identify RF-EMFs as a potential contributing factor to overeating, which underlies the obesity epidemic. Beyond that, the observed RF-EMFs-induced alterations of the brain energy homeostasis may put our data into a broader context because a balanced brain energy homeostasis is of fundamental importance for all brain functions. Potential disturbances by electromagnetic fields may therefore exert some generalized neurobiological effects, which are not yet foreseeable.Entities:
Keywords: body weight; brain; food intake; mobile phone; radio frequency-modulated electromagnetic fields
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057520 PMCID: PMC8777647 DOI: 10.3390/nu14020339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the laboratory setting. Individuals were exposed to two different continuously transmitting mobile phone types via a base station simulator working with maximal power vs. a deactivated phone as a sham condition. Mobile phones were installed in a compact headset without being visible to the participants to ensure that each subject exhibited the same distance between the mobile phone and the head. The antenna was located over the right temporal region. Participants were not given acoustic cues revealing the operation status of the mobile phones, i.e., they were unaware whether the phones were transmitting or not. Standardized buffet testing and MR-scanning procedure occurred in adjacent rooms.
Figure 2Calorie consumption after mobile phone exposure. Total calorie consumption (a), as well as ingested calorie content in the form of carbohydrates (b), proteins (c), and fat (d) from a standardized free-choice ad libitum buffet after 25 min of mobile phone (phone 1 (red bars) and phone 2 (blue bars) or sham (white bars)) exposure, respectively. Values are mean ± s.e.m.; two-tailed Student’s t-test; n = 15; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, t p < 0.1.
Figure 3Effects of mobile phone exposure on neuroenergetic measures. Relative changes (mean values ± s.e.m.) of cerebral ATP/Pi (a) and PCr/Pi ratios (b) after 5 min and a subsequent further 20 min of mobile phone radiation (both phones merged, black dots) in proportion to respective sham condition values (white dots). Grey areas mark the intervention period of mobile phone or sham exposure. Bar charts compare mean values ± s.e.m. of phone 1 (red), phone 2 (blue), and sham (white) exposure, including all time points after intervention. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, t p < 0.1.