8,700 Studies Reviewed. 87.0% Found Biological Effects. The Evidence is Clear.

EMF Research Studies

Browse 8,700 peer-reviewed studies on electromagnetic field health effects from 4 research libraries.

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Ornithine decarboxylase activity is affected in primary astrocytes but not in secondary cell lines exposed to 872 MHz RF radiation

Unknown authors · 2007

Finnish researchers exposed brain cells to 872 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone frequencies) and found that a key enzyme called ornithine decarboxylase was significantly reduced in primary astrocytes (natural brain cells). Importantly, this effect didn't occur in laboratory-grown cell lines, suggesting that natural brain cells may be more vulnerable to RF radiation than artificial cell cultures used in many studies.

Effects of microwave cooking conditions on bioactive compounds present in broccoli inflorescences

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers studied how different microwave cooking conditions (time, power, water volume) affect beneficial nutrients in broccoli. They found that microwave cooking generally reduces health-promoting compounds like vitamin C, antioxidants, and glucosinolates, with longer cooking times and more water causing greater losses. The findings suggest shorter cooking times with minimal water preserve more nutrients.

Abdel-Rassoul G et al, (March 2007) Neurobehavioral effects among inhabitants around mobile phone base stations, Neurotoxicology

Unknown authors · 2007

Egyptian researchers studied 85 people living near cell tower antennas and found significantly higher rates of headaches, memory problems, dizziness, depression, and sleep issues compared to controls. The exposed residents also showed reduced performance on attention and memory tests, even though radiation levels were below official safety limits.

Development and evaluation of the electromagnetic hypersensitivity questionnaire

Unknown authors · 2007

UK researchers developed and tested a questionnaire to identify symptoms that people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS) experience, surveying 20,000 randomly selected individuals. The study identified eight categories of symptoms including neurological, skin, auditory, headache, heart, cold-related, movement, and allergy symptoms. The questionnaire successfully distinguished between people who believe they have EHS and control groups, providing researchers with a standardized tool to study this controversial condition.

Abdel-Rassoul G et al, (March 2007) Neurobehavioral effects among inhabitants around mobile phone base stations, Neurotoxicology

Unknown authors · 2007

Egyptian researchers studied 85 people living near mobile phone base stations and found significantly higher rates of headaches, memory problems, dizziness, depression, and sleep issues compared to 80 controls. The exposed group also showed impaired attention and memory test performance, even though radiation levels were below official safety limits.

Brain & Nervous SystemNo Effects Found133 citations

Prevalence of subjective poor health symptoms associated with exposure to electromagnetic fields among university students

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers surveyed university students in Iran about health symptoms potentially linked to mobile phone, cordless phone, and computer screen use. Despite high rates of reported symptoms like headaches (53.5%) and fatigue (35.6%), the study found no significant association between device use and these health complaints. The authors suggest cultural differences in media coverage may explain why their results differ from studies in developed countries.

Hearing of microwave pulses by humans and animals: effects, mechanism, and thresholds

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers investigated the unusual phenomenon where humans and animals can actually hear pulsed microwave radiation, despite electromagnetic waves normally being invisible and silent. The study found that microwave pulses create tiny heat expansions in head tissues that generate sound waves, which travel through bone to the inner ear where they're perceived as clicks or buzzing sounds. This effect occurs with frequencies from hundreds of MHz to tens of GHz, including those used by wireless devices and MRI machines.

Cancer & Tumors54,976 citations

a risk factor in Iran, Asian Pac J Cancer Prev

Unknown authors · 2007

This 2007 global cancer analysis examined worldwide cancer patterns, finding that 56% of new cases and 64% of deaths occurred in developing countries. The study revealed breast cancer as the leading cause of female cancer deaths globally, while lung cancer dominated male cancer mortality at 23% of deaths.

Acute childhood leukemias and exposure to magnetic fields generated by high voltage overhead power lines

Unknown authors · 2007

Iranian researchers studied 60 children with acute leukemia and 59 healthy children, examining their proximity to high-voltage power lines (123-400 kilovolts). Children living within 500 meters of these lines showed 8.67 times higher odds of developing leukemia. The study found 23.5% of leukemia patients lived near high-voltage lines compared to only 3.3% of healthy children.

Investigation of the sources of residential power frequency magnetic field exposure in the UK Childhood Cancer Study

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers investigated 196 UK homes to identify sources of elevated power frequency magnetic field exposure linked to childhood leukemia risk. They found that 77% of exposures above 0.2 microT came from low-voltage electrical sources within homes (like wiring problems), while high-voltage power lines accounted for only 23%. This challenges the common focus on overhead power lines as the primary concern.

SAGE first interim assessment: Power Lines and Property, Wiring in Homes, and Electrical Equipment in Homes

Unknown authors · 2007

UK health officials analyzed the scientific evidence linking power line magnetic fields to childhood leukemia and concluded that low-cost precautionary measures are justified despite scientific uncertainty. Using established criteria for evaluating health risks, they found that while the evidence isn't definitive, the consistent association across multiple studies warrants protective action.

Paternal occupational exposure to electro-magnetic fields as a risk factor for cancer in children and young adults: a case-control study from the North of England

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers in Northern England studied 4,723 children with cancer and found that those whose fathers worked in jobs with electromagnetic field or radiation exposure had a 31% higher risk of leukemia. The risk was particularly elevated (81% higher) for boys under age 6, while girls showed no significant increase.

Residential exposure to electric power transmission lines and risk of lymphoproliferative and myeloproliferative disorders: a case-control study

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers studied 854 people diagnosed with blood cancers in Tasmania between 1972-1980, comparing them to matched controls based on their proximity to high-voltage power lines. Living within 300 meters of power lines increased cancer risk, with children under 5 showing a fivefold higher risk that persisted into adulthood.

Abdel-Rassoul G et al, (March 2007) Neurobehavioral effects among inhabitants around mobile phone base stations, Neurotoxicology

Unknown authors · 2007

Egyptian researchers studied 85 people living near a mobile phone base station and compared them to 80 controls. Those living near the tower showed significantly higher rates of headaches, memory problems, dizziness, depression, and sleep issues, plus measurable deficits in attention and memory tests. This occurred even though radiation levels were below official safety standards.

A possible effect of electromagnetic radiation from mobile phone base stations on the number of breeding house sparrows (Passer domesticus)

Unknown authors · 2007

Belgian researchers studied house sparrows near cell phone towers and found significantly fewer male birds in areas with stronger electromagnetic radiation from GSM base stations. The study examined 150 locations across six residential districts and found the negative relationship was consistent across all areas, suggesting long-term EMF exposure may reduce bird populations or alter their behavior.

Brain & Nervous SystemNo Effects Found133 citations

Prevalence of subjective poor health symptoms associated with exposure to electromagnetic fields among university students

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers surveyed Iranian university students about health symptoms and their use of mobile phones, cordless phones, and computer screens. Despite high rates of headaches (53.5%) and fatigue (35.6%), they found no significant association between EMF device usage and symptom prevalence. The authors suggested that media coverage differences between developing and developed countries might explain why their results differed from studies showing EMF-symptom connections.

Ornithine decarboxylase activity is affected in primary astrocytes but not in secondary cell lines exposed to 872 MHz RF radiation

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers exposed brain cells to 872 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to older cell phone frequencies) and found that primary astrocytes showed significant decreases in ornithine decarboxylase activity, an enzyme important for cell growth and function. Interestingly, laboratory-grown cell lines showed no effects, suggesting that primary brain cells may be more vulnerable to RF radiation than commonly used research models.

Cognitive impairment in rats after long-term exposure to GSM-900 mobile phone radiation

Unknown authors · 2007

Researchers exposed rats to GSM-900 cell phone radiation for 2 hours weekly over 55 weeks and tested their memory abilities. The exposed rats showed significantly impaired memory for objects and when they were presented, while their spatial memory remained normal. This suggests that long-term cell phone radiation exposure may damage specific types of memory function.

Cancer & Tumors176 citations

Cellular Phone Use and Risk of Benign and Malignant Parotid Gland Tumors A Nationwide Case-Control Study

Unknown authors · 2007

Israeli researchers studied 460 parotid gland tumor patients and 1,266 controls to examine whether cell phone use increases tumor risk in the salivary glands near the ear. While overall cell phone use showed no increased risk, heavy users who held phones directly to their ear (without hands-free devices) had a 58% higher risk of developing tumors on the same side as their phone use. The study found a clear dose-response relationship, meaning more calls and longer call times correlated with higher tumor risk.

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