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Cell Phone Radiation May Cause Visual Damage
IsraCast Technology News, July 29, 2005
by Iddo
Genuth
In a recent scientific
study conducted by a team of researchers from the Technion, a possible
link between microwave radiation, similar to the type found in cellular
phones, and different kinds of damage to the visual system was found.
At least one kind of damage seems to accumulate over time and not heal,
challenging the common view and leading the researchers to the assertion
that the duration of exposure is not less important than the intensity
of the irradiation. The researchers also emphasized that existing exposure
guidelines for microwave radiation might have to change.

Microscope photographs of lenses incubated
in organ culture conditions for 12 days. Right frame shows Control
lens with no damage. Bottom frame demonstrates the effect of microwave
radiation on bovine lens sutures for a total exposure of 192 cycles
(1.1GHz, 2.22mW).Each cycle lasts 50min followed by 10 min pause.
In the absence of microwave radiation, the bubbles are generated by
temperature increase to 39.5 8C during 4 h; see left frame. |
The effects of exposure
to electromagnetic radiation have long been a subject for debate among
scientists. The technological developments of the last twenty years such
as cell and cordless phones, wireless communications, monitors and even
high voltage lines have all been studied as potential risk factors for
cancer and other diseases. Less known to the public, but still a matter
of some extensive research, is the study of the effect of microwave radiation
on the visual system and especially on the lens of the eye. The basic
motivation for this research came after World War II when it was suspected
that radar operators suffered a greater risk of developing cataracts (a
condition characterized by clouding in the natural lens of the eye). Although
these particular suspicions were eventually shown to be debatable, they
were the trigger for the first guidelines for exposure to electromagnetic
radiation. Moreover, the eye as our natural radiation detector is the
obvious choice for investigating the effects of electromagnetic radiation
upon the human body.
In more recent studies
on animals the effects of microwave radiation as a risk factor for cataracts
have been established and have helped determine the guidelines put forth
by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)
in 1998. A common measure for microwave radiation is the Specific Absorption
Rate (SAR) which is the average power density absorbed in a given
volume per average weight density (Watt/Kg). This is the standard used
by cell phone companies, among others, to measure levels of radiation.
When microwave energy impinges upon body tissue, part of it is absorbed
and converted to heat due to ionic conduction. This heat manifests itself
as a temperature increase inside the tissue. Past studies in animals have
shown that even a slight increase in temperature close to the lens (as
low as 3 degrees Celsius) can increase the risk of developing a cataract.
With a low enough SAR the local temperature in the lens might never increase
to that level. A less common measure is called Specific Energy Absorption
(SA), and is defined as the energy density absorbed in the tissue
divided by its weight density. While SAR is the measure of the rate microwave
radiation is absorbed by a tissue, SA is the measure of the total energy
absorbed. This difference played a significant role in a recently published
study on the effects of microwave radiation on the visual system.
In the study conducted
by researchers in the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine at the Technion, and
published in the journal Bioelectromagnetics, a new link has been found
between microwave radiation and the development of cataracts. Eye
lenses of one-year-old male calves obtained from a slaughterhouse were
exposed to microwave radiation - one eye from each pair used for control.
Each exposure session lasted about two weeks. Both control and exposed
lens were kept in an incubator at a constant temperature. During this
period each exposed lens had experienced up to 2mW of 1.1GHz radiation
virtually around the clock, and each hour it was exposed for a 50 minute
session followed by a 10 minute break. During one of these breaks, every
24 hours, it was tested optically and compared to the control lens. During
the short (5 minutes) optical test, the lens was not exposed to radiation,
but when exposed, its average temperature was maintained constant in an
incubator.
The experiment yielded
a number of interesting results:

Good quality lens as demonstrated by the optical
scanner. All rays passing Through the lens have similar focal length.
The thick dashed line connects the points of the back vertex Distance
for each ray passing through the lens. The thick solid line shows
the relative intensity of each beam.

Exposed lens, showing considerable variability
in the focal length of the beams passing through the lens. |
1. Exposing the
lens for a prolonged time to microwave radiation (in the frequency
and intensity described above) caused macroscopic damage affecting
the optical quality of the lens. This damage increased as the experiment
and irradiation continued and reached a maximum level after a number of
days. When the exposure stopped the optical damage began to heal gradually.
Interestingly enough, a similar maximum level was observed when the irradiation
intensity was reduced to one-half the original, except that it took twice
the time.
2. On the microscopic
level a different kind of damage occurred. Tiny "bubbles" were
created on the surface of the lens. The bubbles were formed by irradiation
with microwave and were not the result of a heat created throughout the
lens. The researchers have speculated that the mechanism responsible for
the creation of the bubbles is microscopic friction between particular
cells exposed to electromagnetic radiation. Contrary to the macroscopic
damage, the microscopic damage did not show any signs of healing
and continued to accumulate during the course of the experiment.
Although the researchers
are cautious about interpreting the results of the experiment and its
possible implications to public health, it seems that prolonged exposure
to microwave radiation similar to that used by cellular phones can lead
to both macroscopic and microscopic damage to the lens and that at least
part of this damage seems to accumulate over time and does not seem to
heal. Professor Levi Schδchter, who worked on the research, told IsraCast
that attention should be paid not only to the Specific Absorption Rate
(SAR) but also to the total energy absorbed by the tissue (SA), which
is not currently under supervision by the appropriate regulative authorities.
Implying that the duration of exposure is not less important than the
intensity of the irradiation.
[emphases placed on selected statements are ours-Ed.]
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