4.7 Article

High Power Electromagnetic Waves Exposure of Healthy and Tumor Bearing Mice: Assessment of Effects on Mice Growth, Behavior, Tumor Growth, and Vessel Permeabilization

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22168516

关键词

high power electromagnetic radiation; electromagnetic environments; in vivo; tumor growth; vessel permeability

资金

  1. French Ministry for Defense-Directorate General of Armaments (Direction Generale de l'Armement-DGA)
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-ASTRID 12-ASTR-0039-02 PIERGEN]

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The study demonstrated that exposure to both narrow-band and wide-band high-power electromagnetic waves had no significant impact on the growth of healthy and tumor-bearing animals, as well as on the growth of murine skin tumors. However, wide-band signals may cause behavioral changes in mice.
High power radiofrequencies may transiently or permanently disrupt the functioning of electronic devices, but their effect on living systems remains unknown. With the aim to evaluate the safety and biological effects of narrow-band and wide-band high-power electromagnetic (HPEM) waves, we studied their effects upon exposure of healthy and tumor-bearing mice. In field experiments, the exposure to 1.5 GHz narrow-band electromagnetic fields with the incident amplitude peak value level in the range of 40 kV/m and 150 MHz wide-band electric fields with the amplitude peak value in the range of 200 kV/m, did not alter healthy and tumor-bearing animals' growth, nor it had any impact on cutaneous murine tumors' growth. While we did not observe any noticeable behavioral changes in mice during the exposure to narrow-band signals when wide-band HPEM signals were applied, mice could behave in a similar way as they respond to loud noise signals: namely, if a mouse was exploring the cage prior to signal application, it returned to companion mates when wide-band HPEM signals were applied. Moreover, the effect of wide-band signals was assessed on normal blood vessels permeability in real-time in dorsal-chamber-bearing mice exposed in a pilot study using wide-band signal applicators. Our pilot study conducted within the applicator and performed at the laboratory scale suggests that the exposure to wide-band signals with the amplitude of 47.5 kV/m does not result in increased vessel permeability.

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