Saturday, May 28, 2016

An american study links cellphones to cancer

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US government study links cellphones to cancer in rats

The US National Toxicology Program (NTP) has carried out the results from their multi-year, peer-reviewed study investigating a causal link between cellphones and cancer. The $25 million study is the largest experiment to date looking into this link, and what they found is more than a little disconcerting.

In an underground lab, researchers built 21 radiofrequency chambers in which more than 2,500 starcrossed rats and mice lived for varying periods of time over the course of two years. Wireless technologies under the microscope for the purposes of this study include GSM and CDMA at 900 megahertz and 1900 megahertz. Test subjects were exposed to these forms of radiation for 9 hours per day in alternating 10-minute intervals of exposure and non-exposure. It should be noted that this is a higher degree of exposure than humans experience with their devices on the regular.

The results for the mice study have not yet been released, but a cancer association became clear in male rats. Interestingly, similar results were not found in the female test subjects, but those exposed to cellphone radiation while in utero had lower birth weights. The types of tumors male rats suffered were gliomas (brain tumors) and schwannomas (tumors of the heart). The NTP reports that the correlation, though slight, definitely appears to be causal. Strangely, the male rats who were exposed to radiation actually had a higher survival rate than the control rats that were not exposed.
Given the widespread global usage of mobile communications among users of all ages, even a very small increase in the incidence of disease resulting from exposure to [cellphone radiation] could have broad implications for public health.
Grains of salt all around, though, because animal experiments do not necessarily have a direct correlation with biological effects in the human body. Nevertheless, it will no longer be possible for people to dismissively say that there’s no risk at all. As the project’s former lead Ron Melnick said .




Source : National Toxicology Program

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