Do you believe that 'Cellphones Cause Brain Cancer?' If yes, then its time to demystify your myth. Check out the article featured in NYTimes.com by Siddhartha Mukherjee (Assistant Professor of medicine in the
division of medical oncology at Columbia University).
1) Researchers conducted a study using data from 1,160 patients in the Nevus Outreach Registry to investigate the connection between large congenital melanocytic nevi (LCMN) and primary cutaneous melanoma.
2) They compared melanoma rates in the registry to national cancer data and found similar lifetime risks, contradicting the hypothesis that LCMN increases melanoma risk.
3) A statistical analysis found the hypothesis that LCMN correlates to higher melanoma risk to be false to a high degree of significance, as reported melanoma cases in the registry were likely misdiagnosed.
Dr. Ksparthasarathy, former Secretary of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, discusses various topics relating to radiation from cell phone towers and mobile phones. In multiple articles on his website, he argues that the risks from cell tower radiation are negligible based on extensive international research not finding adverse health effects. He criticizes misinformation in media reports on this topic and clarifies factual errors in one report on cell tower radiation.
Alfred Knudson developed the two-hit hypothesis for cancer causation in 1971 to explain hereditary and non-hereditary retinoblastoma. The hypothesis proposed that cancer results from two mutations, with hereditary cancer requiring one mutation inherited in all cells and non-hereditary cancer requiring two spontaneous mutations. This anticipated the discovery of tumor suppressor genes. Later work extended the two-hit model to other childhood cancers and carcinomas. Currently, Knudson's research focuses on using knowledge of hereditary cancers to develop chemoprevention strategies by targeting early somatic events in high-risk individuals.
This document provides an outline and overview of a presentation on radiation and its risks and benefits. It begins with definitions of electromagnetic radiation and ionizing radiation. It then discusses the history of radiation discovery and uses. This includes pioneers like Roentgen and Curie and studies of radiation effects on survivors of the atomic bombs in Japan. The document focuses on the debate around risks of low-dose radiation from medical scans like CT scans. It discusses the limitations of observational studies and strengths of randomized controlled trials. It also reviews theories around radiation risk at low doses and compares risks to activities like smoking.
This document reports on evidence of millions of deaths and adverse events resulting from COVID-19 injections. It claims official reports vastly undercount deaths and side effects, with actual numbers being 5-100 times higher based on whistleblower accounts and studies. Stories on social media suggest thousands more deaths and injuries among the vaccinated than being reported officially. The document alleges a massive cover-up and criminal suppression of data on vaccine safety.
This document summarizes concerns about potential health risks from cell phone radiation. It discusses how cell phone radiation works and the frequencies involved. Lower frequencies like those from cell phones are linked to health issues like cancer and fertility problems, though the scientific community is hesitant to make definitive claims. The document also discusses a former industry-funded researcher who later warned about risks and criticized how studies downplayed some concerning findings.
Plume to Publish Softcover Edition of Disconnect by Dr. Devra Davis on Septem...prsolutions
Dr. Devra Davis's book Disconnect will be published in softcover on September 27 by Plume Publishing. The book examines the health risks of cell phone radiation and reveals that current US safety standards are outdated. It documents evidence that cell phone radiation can damage DNA, brains, and other organs in lab animals. The new afterword highlights recent findings on health risks from cell phone radiation and efforts by other governments to promote safety. While Dr. Davis still uses cell phones, the book argues it is time to demand safer phones and higher safety standards from regulators given the widespread use of cell phones, especially by children.
This slide is published by UK Radiation Research Trust,
This I am keeping here for the public interest to understand the radiation effect.
Share it if you feel it helpful for others.
analysis credited to Arihant Infosoft
1) Researchers conducted a study using data from 1,160 patients in the Nevus Outreach Registry to investigate the connection between large congenital melanocytic nevi (LCMN) and primary cutaneous melanoma.
2) They compared melanoma rates in the registry to national cancer data and found similar lifetime risks, contradicting the hypothesis that LCMN increases melanoma risk.
3) A statistical analysis found the hypothesis that LCMN correlates to higher melanoma risk to be false to a high degree of significance, as reported melanoma cases in the registry were likely misdiagnosed.
Dr. Ksparthasarathy, former Secretary of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, discusses various topics relating to radiation from cell phone towers and mobile phones. In multiple articles on his website, he argues that the risks from cell tower radiation are negligible based on extensive international research not finding adverse health effects. He criticizes misinformation in media reports on this topic and clarifies factual errors in one report on cell tower radiation.
Alfred Knudson developed the two-hit hypothesis for cancer causation in 1971 to explain hereditary and non-hereditary retinoblastoma. The hypothesis proposed that cancer results from two mutations, with hereditary cancer requiring one mutation inherited in all cells and non-hereditary cancer requiring two spontaneous mutations. This anticipated the discovery of tumor suppressor genes. Later work extended the two-hit model to other childhood cancers and carcinomas. Currently, Knudson's research focuses on using knowledge of hereditary cancers to develop chemoprevention strategies by targeting early somatic events in high-risk individuals.
This document provides an outline and overview of a presentation on radiation and its risks and benefits. It begins with definitions of electromagnetic radiation and ionizing radiation. It then discusses the history of radiation discovery and uses. This includes pioneers like Roentgen and Curie and studies of radiation effects on survivors of the atomic bombs in Japan. The document focuses on the debate around risks of low-dose radiation from medical scans like CT scans. It discusses the limitations of observational studies and strengths of randomized controlled trials. It also reviews theories around radiation risk at low doses and compares risks to activities like smoking.
This document reports on evidence of millions of deaths and adverse events resulting from COVID-19 injections. It claims official reports vastly undercount deaths and side effects, with actual numbers being 5-100 times higher based on whistleblower accounts and studies. Stories on social media suggest thousands more deaths and injuries among the vaccinated than being reported officially. The document alleges a massive cover-up and criminal suppression of data on vaccine safety.
This document summarizes concerns about potential health risks from cell phone radiation. It discusses how cell phone radiation works and the frequencies involved. Lower frequencies like those from cell phones are linked to health issues like cancer and fertility problems, though the scientific community is hesitant to make definitive claims. The document also discusses a former industry-funded researcher who later warned about risks and criticized how studies downplayed some concerning findings.
Plume to Publish Softcover Edition of Disconnect by Dr. Devra Davis on Septem...prsolutions
Dr. Devra Davis's book Disconnect will be published in softcover on September 27 by Plume Publishing. The book examines the health risks of cell phone radiation and reveals that current US safety standards are outdated. It documents evidence that cell phone radiation can damage DNA, brains, and other organs in lab animals. The new afterword highlights recent findings on health risks from cell phone radiation and efforts by other governments to promote safety. While Dr. Davis still uses cell phones, the book argues it is time to demand safer phones and higher safety standards from regulators given the widespread use of cell phones, especially by children.
This slide is published by UK Radiation Research Trust,
This I am keeping here for the public interest to understand the radiation effect.
Share it if you feel it helpful for others.
analysis credited to Arihant Infosoft
When facts fail. talking to people about risks of ionizing radiation clarkeLeishman Associates
This document discusses how people perceive risks related to radiation. It notes that emotional and psychological factors strongly influence risk perception, often overriding facts. People are hardwired to react with fear to potential risks, and make decisions based on mental shortcuts rather than full facts. Poor communication after Chernobyl increased perceived risks and harms. To effectively communicate about radiation risks, communicators need to understand audience perspectives, build trust, share control, frame messages carefully, and present facts in emotionally relevant ways.
This document summarizes the current scientific understanding of the relationship between electromagnetic fields (EMF) from sources like mobile phones and mobile towers, and cancer risk. It reviews the relevant literature and major studies conducted, which have not found a definitive causal link. While long term effects are still being studied, the international radiation exposure limits are based on scientific evidence and prevent thermal effects. Ongoing research aims to further assess health impacts, but there is no current scientific basis that EMF radiation levels from compliant mobile networks pose a cancer risk.
The document summarizes the key findings of the Interphone study on mobile phone use and risk of brain tumors. The Interphone study found a reduced risk of brain tumors in regular mobile phone users compared to non-users, though this is likely due to biases. For heavy or long-term mobile phone use, the study found no increased risks of glioma or meningioma tumors with increased duration of use, number of calls, or years since first use. While limitations in the study prevent definitive conclusions, the evidence to date suggests there is unlikely to be a material increase in brain tumor risk for adults within 10-15 years of mobile phone use.
This document reports evidence that millions have died from the COVID-19 vaccines worldwide based on analyses of various data sources. It claims that official reports vastly undercount deaths and side effects. Whistleblowers allege the US death count is 5-10 times higher than reported. Experts warn the vaccines may be causing the greatest risk of genocide in history and call for stopping their rollout. However, the claims require careful verification and consideration of multiple perspectives given the controversial nature of the topic.
This document reports evidence that millions have died from the COVID-19 vaccines worldwide based on analyses of various data sources. It claims that official numbers vastly underreport deaths and side effects. Whistleblowers allege the US death count is 5-10 times higher than reported. Experts warn the vaccines may be causing the greatest risk of genocide in history and call for an end to the programs. However, the conclusions are disputed and rely on uncertain interpretations of limited data.
Homeopathy_ Thyroid Gland Connection Between Radiation Overdose Simply By CT ...Posis1956782
The document discusses the risks of radiation exposure from medical imaging tests like CT scans and x-rays. It notes that radiation exposure has increased significantly in recent decades due to overuse of these tests. Prolonged or repeated exposure can increase cancer risks over time and damage tissues, especially for children and developing bodies. However, radiation can also be used to treat cancers through radiotherapy. The risks and benefits of radiation must be carefully considered.
Jay Cross, a 63-year-old man with a history of heart attacks and other health issues, pays $999 to have his genome sequenced by 23andMe. He is curious about whether his health problems are due to genetics or lifestyle. The results show he has a 20% lower risk of heart attack than average but provide little other useful information. Critics argue direct-to-consumer genetic testing currently offers limited health value given the complexity of gene-disease relationships and lack of expert guidance on interpreting results. As the science progresses, genetic testing may one day provide clearer insights but also raises concerns about overreaction to risk information.
- According to multiple studies, 57.7% of schoolgirls exposed to low-level microwave radiation from Wi-Fi are at risk of suffering stillbirths, fetal abnormalities, or genetically damaged children when they give birth. This damage may be passed to future generations.
- Exposure of pregnant women to low-level microwave radiation was found to result in 47.7% of pregnancies ending in miscarriage before 7 weeks. Schoolgirls are exposed to similar or higher levels through daily Wi-Fi use from a young age.
- Damage from low-level microwave exposure includes mitochondrial DNA damage, which is passed maternally and can cause health effects in all future generations. The large number of children exposed puts humanity at
This document presents information from a report called "The Vaccine Death Report" that claims experimental COVID-19 vaccines have resulted in millions of deaths and serious adverse events worldwide. It summarizes data on reported deaths and injuries from vaccines in the US and other countries, and argues the true numbers are much higher due to underreporting. Several experts are cited warning about the potential dangers of the vaccines.
This document discusses and debunks some common myths about cell tower radiation. It presents some outlandish claims people make about health effects of cell towers, such as that cell tower radiation causes sweat glands in ears or can transmit STDs. It then provides facts from scientific organizations like WHO and ICNIRP that no health effects have been proven from cell tower radiation levels and that anti-radiation products are unproven. The document encourages verifying information from credible sources rather than social media.
Skincancer is the most common type of cancer. Non-melanoma skin cancers are the most prevalent type, with over 3 million cases diagnosed annually in the US. Melanoma is less common but more aggressive, accounting for most skin cancer deaths. Risk factors include fair skin, sun exposure, and family history. Skin cancers are typically diagnosed through visual examination by a dermatologist and confirmed with a biopsy. Treatments depend on the cancer type and stage but may include surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and immune therapy. Early detection and treatment are key to improving skin cancer outcomes.
Steve Jobs was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer at age 48 in 2003, with symptoms starting at age 24. He died from the disease at age 56 in 2011. Vitamin D from moderate sun exposure without sunscreen may help lower the risk of certain cancers like pancreatic, as it is nearly 50% less likely in those with higher vitamin D levels from sun exposure. While surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy have been standard cancer treatments for decades, they have shown little improvement in overall survival rates for all cancers in the last 55 years. Alternative non-toxic treatments exist but are suppressed.
“The data presented here and in the literature are consistent with the hypothesis that at least one cancer, retinoblastoma, can be caused by two mutations…. One of these mutations may be inherited as a result of a previous germinal mutation…. Those patients that inherit one mutation develop tumors earlier than do those who develop the nonhereditary form of the disease; in a majority of cases those who inherit a mutation develop more than one tumor.
The document discusses the "two hits theory" of cancer development put forth by Dr. Alfred Knudson. Knudson proposed that two genetic mutations or "hits" are required for cancer to develop based on his study of retinoblastoma. Some cancers, like chronic myelogenous leukemia, appear to be triggered by a single genetic event. Knudson's two hits theory provided insights into cancer genetics and established the foundations for understanding how cancers originate on a cellular level.
Notes on Williams -Thyroid growth and cancerAzby Brown
Williams is a leading expert in radiation-induced thyroid cancer who has closely followed the Fukushima thyroid screening results. In a recent paper, he makes several conclusions: 1) The large number of thyroid cancers detected so far are likely not due to radiation exposure from the Fukushima accident. 2) An increase in thyroid cancer due to radiation is still expected but will be much smaller than after Chernobyl. 3) The Fukushima results show that many more thyroid cancers originate in early life than previously known.
Bronchopulmonary cancers are common cancers with a poor prognosis. It is the leading cause of death by cancer in Algeria and in the world. Behind this unfavorable prognosis hides numerous disparities according to age, sex, and exposure to risk factors, ranking 4th among incident cancers and developing countries including Algeria, all sexes combined. It ranks 2nd cancers in men and 3rd among women. Whatever the age observed, the incidence of this cancer is higher in men than in women, however the gap is narrowing to the detriment of the latter. The results of scientific research agree to relate trends in incidence and mortality rates to tobacco consumption, including passive smoking. Furthermore, other risk factors are mentioned such as exposure to asbestos in the workplace or to radon for the general population, or even genetic predisposition. However, the weight of these etiological and/or predisposing factors is in no way comparable to that of tobacco in the genesis of lung cancer and the resulting mortality. We provide a literature review in our article on the descriptive and analytical epidemiology of lung cancer.
Cellular Telephone Use & the Risk of Brain Tumors.GhaYooruL
The document summarizes research on the potential health risks of cellular phone use and radiation. It discusses the history of phones and radiation types. It describes studies that found no significant association between phone use and brain tumors overall, though slightly higher risks were found for tumors in parts of the brain near phone use. The document recommends reducing phone use near the head, especially for children, and choosing phones with lower radiation absorption.
This study analyzed cancer rates in twins from Swedish, Danish, and Finnish twin registries to determine the effects of genetics and environment on cancer risk. The researchers found that identical twins were more likely to both develop the same type of cancer than non-identical twins, showing a genetic influence. However, most twin pairs did not both develop cancer, indicating environmental factors play a larger role than genetics for most cancers. The study estimated that genetics accounted for 28% of stomach cancer risk, 35% of colorectal cancer risk, and 27% of breast cancer risk, while environment had a greater influence on other cancer types. The results suggest genetics plays a role in some cancers but environment is the primary driver of cancer risk in the population.
Bad habits like smoking, drinking and erratic diets are the primary causes of cancer. Cell phones emit low frequency magnetic energy and are not responsible to cause cancer.
When facts fail. talking to people about risks of ionizing radiation clarkeLeishman Associates
This document discusses how people perceive risks related to radiation. It notes that emotional and psychological factors strongly influence risk perception, often overriding facts. People are hardwired to react with fear to potential risks, and make decisions based on mental shortcuts rather than full facts. Poor communication after Chernobyl increased perceived risks and harms. To effectively communicate about radiation risks, communicators need to understand audience perspectives, build trust, share control, frame messages carefully, and present facts in emotionally relevant ways.
This document summarizes the current scientific understanding of the relationship between electromagnetic fields (EMF) from sources like mobile phones and mobile towers, and cancer risk. It reviews the relevant literature and major studies conducted, which have not found a definitive causal link. While long term effects are still being studied, the international radiation exposure limits are based on scientific evidence and prevent thermal effects. Ongoing research aims to further assess health impacts, but there is no current scientific basis that EMF radiation levels from compliant mobile networks pose a cancer risk.
The document summarizes the key findings of the Interphone study on mobile phone use and risk of brain tumors. The Interphone study found a reduced risk of brain tumors in regular mobile phone users compared to non-users, though this is likely due to biases. For heavy or long-term mobile phone use, the study found no increased risks of glioma or meningioma tumors with increased duration of use, number of calls, or years since first use. While limitations in the study prevent definitive conclusions, the evidence to date suggests there is unlikely to be a material increase in brain tumor risk for adults within 10-15 years of mobile phone use.
This document reports evidence that millions have died from the COVID-19 vaccines worldwide based on analyses of various data sources. It claims that official reports vastly undercount deaths and side effects. Whistleblowers allege the US death count is 5-10 times higher than reported. Experts warn the vaccines may be causing the greatest risk of genocide in history and call for stopping their rollout. However, the claims require careful verification and consideration of multiple perspectives given the controversial nature of the topic.
This document reports evidence that millions have died from the COVID-19 vaccines worldwide based on analyses of various data sources. It claims that official numbers vastly underreport deaths and side effects. Whistleblowers allege the US death count is 5-10 times higher than reported. Experts warn the vaccines may be causing the greatest risk of genocide in history and call for an end to the programs. However, the conclusions are disputed and rely on uncertain interpretations of limited data.
Homeopathy_ Thyroid Gland Connection Between Radiation Overdose Simply By CT ...Posis1956782
The document discusses the risks of radiation exposure from medical imaging tests like CT scans and x-rays. It notes that radiation exposure has increased significantly in recent decades due to overuse of these tests. Prolonged or repeated exposure can increase cancer risks over time and damage tissues, especially for children and developing bodies. However, radiation can also be used to treat cancers through radiotherapy. The risks and benefits of radiation must be carefully considered.
Jay Cross, a 63-year-old man with a history of heart attacks and other health issues, pays $999 to have his genome sequenced by 23andMe. He is curious about whether his health problems are due to genetics or lifestyle. The results show he has a 20% lower risk of heart attack than average but provide little other useful information. Critics argue direct-to-consumer genetic testing currently offers limited health value given the complexity of gene-disease relationships and lack of expert guidance on interpreting results. As the science progresses, genetic testing may one day provide clearer insights but also raises concerns about overreaction to risk information.
- According to multiple studies, 57.7% of schoolgirls exposed to low-level microwave radiation from Wi-Fi are at risk of suffering stillbirths, fetal abnormalities, or genetically damaged children when they give birth. This damage may be passed to future generations.
- Exposure of pregnant women to low-level microwave radiation was found to result in 47.7% of pregnancies ending in miscarriage before 7 weeks. Schoolgirls are exposed to similar or higher levels through daily Wi-Fi use from a young age.
- Damage from low-level microwave exposure includes mitochondrial DNA damage, which is passed maternally and can cause health effects in all future generations. The large number of children exposed puts humanity at
This document presents information from a report called "The Vaccine Death Report" that claims experimental COVID-19 vaccines have resulted in millions of deaths and serious adverse events worldwide. It summarizes data on reported deaths and injuries from vaccines in the US and other countries, and argues the true numbers are much higher due to underreporting. Several experts are cited warning about the potential dangers of the vaccines.
This document discusses and debunks some common myths about cell tower radiation. It presents some outlandish claims people make about health effects of cell towers, such as that cell tower radiation causes sweat glands in ears or can transmit STDs. It then provides facts from scientific organizations like WHO and ICNIRP that no health effects have been proven from cell tower radiation levels and that anti-radiation products are unproven. The document encourages verifying information from credible sources rather than social media.
Skincancer is the most common type of cancer. Non-melanoma skin cancers are the most prevalent type, with over 3 million cases diagnosed annually in the US. Melanoma is less common but more aggressive, accounting for most skin cancer deaths. Risk factors include fair skin, sun exposure, and family history. Skin cancers are typically diagnosed through visual examination by a dermatologist and confirmed with a biopsy. Treatments depend on the cancer type and stage but may include surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and immune therapy. Early detection and treatment are key to improving skin cancer outcomes.
Steve Jobs was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer at age 48 in 2003, with symptoms starting at age 24. He died from the disease at age 56 in 2011. Vitamin D from moderate sun exposure without sunscreen may help lower the risk of certain cancers like pancreatic, as it is nearly 50% less likely in those with higher vitamin D levels from sun exposure. While surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy have been standard cancer treatments for decades, they have shown little improvement in overall survival rates for all cancers in the last 55 years. Alternative non-toxic treatments exist but are suppressed.
“The data presented here and in the literature are consistent with the hypothesis that at least one cancer, retinoblastoma, can be caused by two mutations…. One of these mutations may be inherited as a result of a previous germinal mutation…. Those patients that inherit one mutation develop tumors earlier than do those who develop the nonhereditary form of the disease; in a majority of cases those who inherit a mutation develop more than one tumor.
The document discusses the "two hits theory" of cancer development put forth by Dr. Alfred Knudson. Knudson proposed that two genetic mutations or "hits" are required for cancer to develop based on his study of retinoblastoma. Some cancers, like chronic myelogenous leukemia, appear to be triggered by a single genetic event. Knudson's two hits theory provided insights into cancer genetics and established the foundations for understanding how cancers originate on a cellular level.
Notes on Williams -Thyroid growth and cancerAzby Brown
Williams is a leading expert in radiation-induced thyroid cancer who has closely followed the Fukushima thyroid screening results. In a recent paper, he makes several conclusions: 1) The large number of thyroid cancers detected so far are likely not due to radiation exposure from the Fukushima accident. 2) An increase in thyroid cancer due to radiation is still expected but will be much smaller than after Chernobyl. 3) The Fukushima results show that many more thyroid cancers originate in early life than previously known.
Bronchopulmonary cancers are common cancers with a poor prognosis. It is the leading cause of death by cancer in Algeria and in the world. Behind this unfavorable prognosis hides numerous disparities according to age, sex, and exposure to risk factors, ranking 4th among incident cancers and developing countries including Algeria, all sexes combined. It ranks 2nd cancers in men and 3rd among women. Whatever the age observed, the incidence of this cancer is higher in men than in women, however the gap is narrowing to the detriment of the latter. The results of scientific research agree to relate trends in incidence and mortality rates to tobacco consumption, including passive smoking. Furthermore, other risk factors are mentioned such as exposure to asbestos in the workplace or to radon for the general population, or even genetic predisposition. However, the weight of these etiological and/or predisposing factors is in no way comparable to that of tobacco in the genesis of lung cancer and the resulting mortality. We provide a literature review in our article on the descriptive and analytical epidemiology of lung cancer.
Cellular Telephone Use & the Risk of Brain Tumors.GhaYooruL
The document summarizes research on the potential health risks of cellular phone use and radiation. It discusses the history of phones and radiation types. It describes studies that found no significant association between phone use and brain tumors overall, though slightly higher risks were found for tumors in parts of the brain near phone use. The document recommends reducing phone use near the head, especially for children, and choosing phones with lower radiation absorption.
This study analyzed cancer rates in twins from Swedish, Danish, and Finnish twin registries to determine the effects of genetics and environment on cancer risk. The researchers found that identical twins were more likely to both develop the same type of cancer than non-identical twins, showing a genetic influence. However, most twin pairs did not both develop cancer, indicating environmental factors play a larger role than genetics for most cancers. The study estimated that genetics accounted for 28% of stomach cancer risk, 35% of colorectal cancer risk, and 27% of breast cancer risk, while environment had a greater influence on other cancer types. The results suggest genetics plays a role in some cancers but environment is the primary driver of cancer risk in the population.
Bad habits like smoking, drinking and erratic diets are the primary causes of cancer. Cell phones emit low frequency magnetic energy and are not responsible to cause cancer.
Newer digital cellphones generally emit lower levels of radiation than older analog phones from the 1980s and 1990s. Internationally, cellphones can operate at up to 2 watts of radiation per kilogram of body weight, but India has a stricter limit of 1.6 watts per kilogram. All phones sold in India must meet this stricter standard, and some Chinese phones with radiation levels as high as 5-10 watts per kilogram have been banned from import into India.
Is celltower radiation a cause of frequent headaches #safe towersThe Radiation Doctor
The World Health Organization reviewed studies investigating the effects of radiofrequency fields from cell towers on health. The studies did not find consistent evidence that exposure below levels causing tissue heating causes adverse health effects. Additionally, research did not find support for a causal relationship between electromagnetic fields and self-reported symptoms like headaches or electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Double-blind studies found people unable to detect when cell towers were on or off and reported symptoms before towers were operational, demonstrating these were psychosomatic responses rather than biological reactions.
The mobile phone industry takes allegations of adverse health impacts seriously due to the potential for expensive product liability lawsuits and loss of subscribers. Therefore, the industry has participated in and funded research studies on the health effects of cell phones and towers. Indian regulations set stricter norms than international standards, fining operators for towers emitting excessive levels and banning handsets with SAR rates above the 1.6 watts per kilogram limit.
What are the guidelines for installation of mobile towers across the countryThe Radiation Doctor
The Department of Telecommunications in India has established strict regulations for installing mobile towers that mandate power emission levels, minimum distances from houses and buildings, and emission limits that are ten times stricter than international norms. Telecom enforcement units conduct random audits of operators to ensure emission levels below 0.45 watts per square meter at 900 MHz, and operators found exceeding this strict Indian limit can be fined Rs. Ten Lakhs per incident.
What r the views of national & international orgs about mobile phone,tower em...The Radiation Doctor
United Nations Environment Protection Programme (UNEP) has conducted studies and research projects on the impact of mobile phone and tower emissions on the environment and biodiversity. In India, the Department of Science and Technology has a comprehensive monitoring program studying the effects of towers on animals, birds, plants, crops, bees, and other living things.
Why is there a restriction on using mobile phones in airplane flightsThe Radiation Doctor
Mobile phones are restricted on airplanes to avoid any potential interference with older avionics and navigation systems, as there was a small probability 30 years ago that analog signals within a few inches could interfere. Modern digital phones and avionics have mechanisms to reject unwanted signals, so interference is now almost impossible. Restrictions now mainly maintain onboard discipline and allow airlines to charge for their onboard communication systems.
Electromagnetic fields are produced by electric charges, both stationary and moving. When charges are stationary, they produce only an electric field, but when in motion they also produce a magnetic field. The electric and magnetic fields combine to form an electromagnetic field, which can transport signals like radio, TV, light, and radiation from the sun. All electric devices and appliances generate electromagnetic fields through their electric and magnetic components.
All radiofrequency waves used in modern telecommunications like 3G, 4G, WiFi and WIMAX are too weak in energy to cause any harm, having only a fraction of the energy of sunlight. International bodies like the ICNIRP and national regulators in the US and UK have determined that 3G, 4G and WiFi devices are safe based on the low energy levels of the radiofrequency waves they use.
Data points covered in the workshop conducted in Kochi, on the Govt. of India guidelines on installation, and safety regime of Telecom Towers and Mobile phones.
Public communication of RF & Health Risks in India - Dr. K. S. ParthasarathyThe Radiation Doctor
Dr. K. S. Parthasarathy, Former Secretary, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, Government of India, about what steps can be taken to change the public perception.
This document discusses issues facing the telecom industry in India compared to other countries. It notes that India has more mobile operators competing for less spectrum than other nations, and the highest government fees and taxes on the industry at 30% compared to 3.5-6.5% elsewhere. Despite this, mobile services in India remain very inexpensive at 3.5% of per capita income compared to 5% in developed countries. The document calls for the government to facilitate cell tower infrastructure and educate the public about unfounded health concerns regarding radiation to help the industry and expand digital services.
Dr. AVS Suresh, MD, DM, ECMO, Consultant Hemato-Oncologist, Chief Scientific Officer & Director, ClinSync, on the man-made as well as other kind of EMF radiation.
Dr. Eshwar Chandra (MD DNB FRCR FICR), Professor and HOD of Kamineni Academy of Medical Sciences, Hyderabad, on EMF radiation and the spectrum of ionising and nonionising radiation.
Promoting Wellbeing - Applied Social Psychology - Psychology SuperNotesPsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
Recomendações da OMS sobre cuidados maternos e neonatais para uma experiência pós-natal positiva.
Em consonância com os ODS – Objetivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável e a Estratégia Global para a Saúde das Mulheres, Crianças e Adolescentes, e aplicando uma abordagem baseada nos direitos humanos, os esforços de cuidados pós-natais devem expandir-se para além da cobertura e da simples sobrevivência, de modo a incluir cuidados de qualidade.
Estas diretrizes visam melhorar a qualidade dos cuidados pós-natais essenciais e de rotina prestados às mulheres e aos recém-nascidos, com o objetivo final de melhorar a saúde e o bem-estar materno e neonatal.
Uma “experiência pós-natal positiva” é um resultado importante para todas as mulheres que dão à luz e para os seus recém-nascidos, estabelecendo as bases para a melhoria da saúde e do bem-estar a curto e longo prazo. Uma experiência pós-natal positiva é definida como aquela em que as mulheres, pessoas que gestam, os recém-nascidos, os casais, os pais, os cuidadores e as famílias recebem informação consistente, garantia e apoio de profissionais de saúde motivados; e onde um sistema de saúde flexível e com recursos reconheça as necessidades das mulheres e dos bebês e respeite o seu contexto cultural.
Estas diretrizes consolidadas apresentam algumas recomendações novas e já bem fundamentadas sobre cuidados pós-natais de rotina para mulheres e neonatos que recebem cuidados no pós-parto em unidades de saúde ou na comunidade, independentemente dos recursos disponíveis.
É fornecido um conjunto abrangente de recomendações para cuidados durante o período puerperal, com ênfase nos cuidados essenciais que todas as mulheres e recém-nascidos devem receber, e com a devida atenção à qualidade dos cuidados; isto é, a entrega e a experiência do cuidado recebido. Estas diretrizes atualizam e ampliam as recomendações da OMS de 2014 sobre cuidados pós-natais da mãe e do recém-nascido e complementam as atuais diretrizes da OMS sobre a gestão de complicações pós-natais.
O estabelecimento da amamentação e o manejo das principais intercorrências é contemplada.
Recomendamos muito.
Vamos discutir essas recomendações no nosso curso de pós-graduação em Aleitamento no Instituto Ciclos.
Esta publicação só está disponível em inglês até o momento.
Prof. Marcus Renato de Carvalho
www.agostodourado.com
Osteoporosis - Definition , Evaluation and Management .pdfJim Jacob Roy
Osteoporosis is an increasing cause of morbidity among the elderly.
In this document , a brief outline of osteoporosis is given , including the risk factors of osteoporosis fractures , the indications for testing bone mineral density and the management of osteoporosis
Cell Therapy Expansion and Challenges in Autoimmune DiseaseHealth Advances
There is increasing confidence that cell therapies will soon play a role in the treatment of autoimmune disorders, but the extent of this impact remains to be seen. Early readouts on autologous CAR-Ts in lupus are encouraging, but manufacturing and cost limitations are likely to restrict access to highly refractory patients. Allogeneic CAR-Ts have the potential to broaden access to earlier lines of treatment due to their inherent cost benefits, however they will need to demonstrate comparable or improved efficacy to established modalities.
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Do Cellphones Cause Brain Cancer?
1. Do Cellphones Cause Brain Cancer? - NYTimes.com
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April 13, 2011
Do Cellphones Cause Brain Cancer?
By SIDDHARTHA MUKHERJEE
On Jan. 21, 1993, the television talk-show host Larry King featured an unexpected guest on
his program. It was the evening after Inauguration Day in Washington, and the television
audience tuned in expecting political commentary. But King turned, instead, to a young man
from Florida, David Reynard, who had filed a tort claim against the cellphone manufacturer
NEC and the carrier GTE Mobilnet, claiming that radiation from their phones caused or
accelerated the growth of a brain tumor in his wife.
“The tumor was exactly in the pattern of the antenna,” Reynard told King. In 1989, Susan
Elen Reynard, then 31, was told she had a malignant astrocytoma, a brain cancer that occurs
in about 6,000 adults in America each year. To David Reynard, the shape and size of Susan’s
tumor — a hazy line swerving from the left side of her midbrain to the hindbrain —
uncannily resembled a malignant shadow of the phone (but tumors, like clouds, can assume
the shapes of our imaginations). Suzy, as she was known, held her phone at precisely that
angle against her left ear, her husband said. Reynard underwent surgery for her cancer but
to little effect. She died in 1992, just short of her 34th birthday. David was convinced that
high doses of radiation from the cellphone was the cause.
Reynard v. NEC — the first tort suit in the United States to claim a link between phone
radiation and brain cancer — illustrated one of the most complex conceptual problems in
cancer epidemiology. In principle, a risk factor and cancer can intersect in three ways. The
first is arguably the simplest. When a rare form of cancer is associated with a rare exposure,
the link between the risk and the cancer stands out starkly. The juxtaposition of the rare on
the rare is like a statistical lunar eclipse, and the association can often be discerned
accurately by observation alone. The discipline of cancer epidemiology originated in one
such a confluence: in 1775, a London surgeon, Sir Percivall Pott, discovered that scrotal
cancer was much more common in chimney sweeps than in the general population. The link
between an unusual malignancy and an uncommon profession was so striking that Pott did
not even need statistics to prove the association. Pott thus discovered one of the first clear
links between an environmental substance — a “carcinogen” — and a particular subtype of
cancer.
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The opposite phenomenon occurs when a common exposure is associated with a common
form of cancer: the association, rather than popping out, disappears into the background,
like white noise. This peculiar form of a statistical vanishing act occurred famously with
tobacco smoking and lung cancer. In the mid-1930s, smoking was becoming so common and
lung cancer so prevalent that it was often impossible to definitively discern a statistical link
between the two. Researchers wondered whether the intersection of the two phenomena was
causal or accidental. Asked about the strikingly concomitant increases in lung cancer and
smoking rates in the 1930s, Evarts Graham, a surgeon, countered dismissively that “the sale
of nylon stockings” had also increased. Tobacco thus became the nylon stockings of cancer
epidemiology — invisible as a carcinogen to many researchers, until it was later identified as
a major cause of cancer through careful clinical studies in the 1950s and 1960s.
But the most complex and most publicly contentious intersection between a risk factor and
cancer often occurs in the third instance, when a common exposure is associated with a rare
form of cancer. This is cancer epidemiology’s toughest conundrum. The rarity of the cancer
provokes a desperate and often corrosive search for a cause (“why, of all people, did I get an
astrocytoma?” Susan Reynard must have asked herself). And when patients with brain
tumors happen to share a common exposure — in this case, cellphones — the line between
cause and coincidence begins to blur. The association does not stand out nor does it
disappear into statistical white noise. Instead, it remains suspended, like some sort of
peculiar optical illusion that is blurry to some and all too clear to others. (A similarly
corrosive intersection of a rare illness, a common exposure and the desperate search for a
cause occurred recently in the saga of autism and vaccination. Vaccines are nearly universal,
and autism is relatively rare — and many parents, searching to explain why their children
became autistic, lunged toward a common culprit: childhood vaccination. An avalanche of
panic ensued. It took years of carefully performed clinical trials to finally disprove the link.)
The Florida Circuit Court that heard Reynard v. NEC was quick to discern these
complexities. It empathized with David Reynard’s search for a tangible cause for his wife’s
cancer. But it acknowledged that too little was known about such cases; “the uncertainty of
the evidence . . . the speculative scientific hypotheses and [incomplete] epidemiological
studies” made it impossible to untangle cause from coincidence. David Reynard’s claim was
rejected in the spring of 1995, three years after it was originally filed. What was needed, the
court said, was much deeper and more comprehensive knowledge about cellphones, brain
cancer and of the possible intersection of the two.
Allow, then, a thought experiment: what if Susan Reynard was given a diagnosis of
astrocytoma in 2011 — but this time, we armed her with the most omniscient of lawyers, the
most cutting-edge epidemiological information, the most powerful scientific evidence?
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Nineteen years and several billion cellphone users later, if Reynard were to reappear in
court, what would we now know about a possible link between cellphones and her cancer?
To answer these questions, we need to begin with a more fundamental question: How do we
know that anything causes cancer?
The crudest method to capture a carcinogen’s imprint in a real human population is a largescale population survey. If a cancer-causing agent increases the incidence of a particular
cancer in a population, say tobacco smoking and lung cancer, then the overall incidence of
that cancer will rise. That statement sounds simple enough — to find a carcinogen’s shadow,
follow the trend in cancer incidence — but there are some fundamental factors that make the
task complicated.
The most important of these is life expectancy, which is growing almost everywhere. The
average life expectancy of Americans has increased — from 49 in 1900 to 78 in 2011. Several
cancers are strongly, often exponentially, age-dependent. An aging population will seem
more cancer-afflicted, even if the real cancer incidence has not changed.
But what if we make an “age adjustment” for the population and shrink or expand the cancer
incidence to match the changes in age structure? To ask whether cellphones increase the risk
of brain cancer, then, we might begin by turning to this question: Has the age-adjusted
incidence of brain cancer increased in the recent past?
The quick answer is no. Brain cancer is rare: only about 7 cases are diagnosed per 100,000
men and women in America per year, and a striking increase, following the introduction of a
potent carcinogen, should be evident. From 1990 to 2002 — the 12-year period during which
cellphone users grew to 135 million from 4 million — the age-adjusted incidence rate for
overall brain cancer remained nearly flat. If anything, it decreased slightly, from 7 cases for
every 100,000 persons to 6.5 cases (the reasons for the decrease are unknown). In 2010, a
larger study updated these results, examining trends between 1992 and 2006. Once again,
there was no increase in overall incidence in brain cancer. But if you subdivided the
population into groups, an unusual pattern emerged: in females ages 20 to 29 (but not in
males) the age-adjusted risk of cancer in the front of the brain grew slightly, from 2.5 cases
per 100,000 to 2.6. These cancers appear in the frontal lobe — a knuckle-shaped area
immediately behind the forehead and the eye. It is difficult to imagine that cellphones
caused these frontal-lobe tumors: how, or why, would a phone’s toxicity have skipped over
the area nearest to it and caused a tumor in a distant site? Most epidemiologists and
biologists do not find such a tissue-skipping mechanism plausible and most doubt that there
is any causal link between frontal tumors and phones.
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But a populationwide survey, you might argue, has its limits. The carcinogenic effect of a
phone might be so subtle that it never registers in such a survey. A phone may cause cancer
after a long lag time — say, 20 years — and it may be too early to look for an effect in a
general population. The survey data could be incomplete or of poor quality, thus limiting an
epidemiologist’s ability to ever find a discernible link.
Epidemiologists, fortunately, possess a more powerful alternative to uncover a link between
a risk factor and cancer. Consider the classic studies that finally revealed the association
between tobacco and lung cancer. In the late 1940s, Sir Richard Doll and Sir Austin Bradford
Hill, working in London, and Ernst Wynder and Evarts Graham, working in St. Louis, began
investigating whether tobacco smoking increased the risk of lung cancer.
Working independently, Doll and Hill, and Wynder and Graham, devised remarkably similar
kinds of surveys to reveal a possible link. Using hospital records, they identified a “case”
group (a cohort of men with lung cancer) and a matched group of men without lung cancer
(a “control” group).
The case group and the control group were asked the same questions, including how much
and how often they smoked. By comparing the responses of lung-cancer-afflicted men and
nonafflicted men, the two teams of researchers stumbled on a striking association: men with
lung cancer had a much longer and deeper history of smoking compared with men without
lung cancer.
What if you perform a similar case-control study with cellphones — comparing men and
women suffering from brain cancer (cases) and men and women without brain cancer
(controls) — looking at their past cellphone use? In 2010, an enormous study, called
Interphone, tried to accomplish this task. Setting up the study took years: Interphone
recruited participants in 13 countries, ran for a decade and included 5,117 brain-tumor cases
and 5,634 controls. The study was coordinated by the World Health Organization and
financed primarily by the European Union and cellphone companies, although by agreement
industry representatives did not have privileged access to results before publication.
Trials like Interphone are undertaken in the hope that they cleanse the field of doubts. In
fact, Interphone achieved just the opposite effect: it ignited even more puzzling questions.
Over all, the study found little evidence for an association between brain tumors and
cellphones. But when the two cohorts — cancer and no cancer — were subdivided according
to the frequency of cellphone use, bizarre results emerged. To start with, there was an
apparently decreased risk of brain tumors in regular phone users, compared with rare users
or nonusers. In other words, regular cellphone use seemed to reduce the risk of brain
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tumors. In stark contrast, very high cellphone use (measured as a user’s cumulative call
time) seemed to increase the risk of a particular subtype of brain tumor. Needless to say, it is
biologically implausible that these results are simultaneously true: how can regular
cellphone use protect against cancer while frequent phone use increases risk? To most
epidemiologists, including the authors of Interphone, the results point to a systemic flaw in
the trial.
Similar case-control studies have examined other kinds of brain tumors, including a rare
nonmalignant tumor called an acoustic neuroma. Here, too, the trials have been
contradictory. Multiple studies found no association with cellphone use. In contrast, one
study from Sweden found an increased risk in people who used their phones for more than
10 years.
How can trials that seem so similar at face value arrive at such disparate and contradictory
results? The most likely common problem is bias — built into the very structure of these
trials. In a case-control trial, patients are asked to remember their risk of exposure after the
fact. In the Interphone study, for instance, participants were asked to recall the extent of
their phone use years or even decades in their past. And memory, we now know, is a terribly
slippery entity. A patient’s memory of his or her past is a particularly charged and malleable
thing; burned into David Reynard’s memory, poignantly, is the shape of the cellphone in his
wife’s hand and the imprint of the cancer on her brain.
In fact, our memories turn out to be systematically fragile, especially when we are
summoning our past to understand illness. In 1993, a Harvard researcher named Edward
Giovannucci set out to measure this phenomenon. Giovannucci identified a cohort of women
with breast cancer and an age-matched cohort without cancer, and asked each group about
its previous dietary habits. The survey produced a reliable and reasonable trend: women
with breast cancer were more likely to have consumed diets high in fat.
But the women in Giovannucci’s study had also completed a dietary survey before their
diagnosis of breast cancer. How did a woman’s memory of her diet compare with the actual
diet that she recorded before her cancer diagnosis?
Giovannucci’s study illustrates the insidious nature of “recall bias.” In women with no
cancer, there was no change between the actual and remembered diet. But women with
breast cancer typically recalled a much-higher-fat diet than they actually consumed. The
diagnosis of breast cancer had not just changed a woman’s present and the future; it had
altered her sense of her past. Women with breast cancer had (unconsciously) decided that a
higher-fat diet was a likely predisposition for their disease and (unconsciously) recalled a
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high-fat diet. It was a pattern poignantly familiar to anyone who knows the history of this
stigmatized illness: these women, like thousands of women before them, had searched their
own memories for a cause and then summoned that cause into memory.
It is very likely that similar effects undid the Interphone trial: some men and women with
brain cancer recalled a disproportionately high use of cellphones, while others recalled
disproportionately low exposure. Indeed, 10 men and women with brain tumors (but none of
the “controls”) recalled 12 hours or more of use every day — a number that stretches
credibility. In a substudy of Interphone, researchers embedded phones with special software
to track phone usage. When this log was compared with the “recalled” usage, there were
wide and random variations: some users underreported, while others overreported use.
The trouble is that even the largest, longest, best-designed retrospective studies that rely on
memory are likely to be riddled by recall bias. Typically, it is not the failure of memory that
produces this bias, but its hyperactivity — its desire to explain the uncertainty of the present
with the certainty of the past.
There are certainly methods in epidemiology to counteract the biases created by selective
memory: Interphone researchers could have initially identified a cohort of high-volume
cellphone users and of nonusers, and followed them over time to determine who developed
or did not develop cancer. Such a study — called a “prospective trial” — would certainly erase
the biases of memory. But it would be logistically impossible to perform. Since the rates of
brain cancer are small, about 6.5 cases per 100,000 persons, a trial of this design would need
to follow an enormous cohort of cellphone users — hundreds of thousands of participants —
to record even a few cancers. And where on earth would you find the nonusers for the study?
In most nations, cellphone usage is so common that finding 500,000 people who will not use
phones for a decade is hard to imagine.
There are yet more powerful epidemiological methods that seem even more far-fetched. A
trial that forcibly randomizes men and women to use cellphones or restrict phone use — a
“randomized trial” — would certainly guarantee the most bias-free result, but would trespass
inviolable ethical and practical concerns. Another study might try to minimize a person’s
biased memory of exposure by collecting actual data on phone use from phone networks
(scanning phone minutes and call logs from real bills), but this would violate privacy laws.
Thus far, individual call logs — even anonymized logs — have not been made public to
researchers.
What if we moved the studies from humans to animals? Benzene, benzopyrenes,
methylcholanthrene and some aniline derivatives (among many other chemicals) were first
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discovered as cancer-causing agents using mice, rats and rabbits. Decades before Doll and
Hill’s elaborate studies on tobacco smokers in London, an Argentine biologist, Angel Roffo,
“painted” rabbits with a grey-black solution containing distilled cigarette tar and
demonstrated that the smoky residue caused cancer.
Might an animal experiment identify the carcinogenicity of cellphone radiation that
Interphone missed? Prototypical animal studies for carcinogens involve exposing one group
of animals to the suspected agent and comparing it to the unexposed group. But as the 16thcentury physician Paracelsus reminds us, “It is the dose that makes the poison.”
Determining the appropriate amount to test and delivering it to the right part of an animal’s
body is often crucial to the experiment.
At face value, testing “radiation,” which is measured in standardized doses, would seem to
make this simple. But all radiation is not created equal. The word “radiation” refers to
energy that emanates from a source — but the spectrum of radiant energy is broad. On the
highly energetic end of the spectrum is ionizing radiation — like X-rays or cosmic rays — that
are so powerful they can tear away electrons from atoms and molecules and penetrate
barriers like the skull and the brain. On the way into — and through — the body, they deposit
powerful bursts of energy, generate corrosive chemicals, ruffle up DNA, kill cells and, most
notably, mutate growth-controlling genes to cause cancer.
Nonionizing radiation lies on the other end of the energy spectrum. These rays can warm
cells, boil water and stimulate chemical reactions, but they cannot strip electrons away from
atoms or damage DNA. They have no capacity to mutate genes directly and thereby no
simple and direct means of initiating cancer. Radiation from microwaves, from cellular
phones and from light bulbs are examples of nonionizing radiation.
All of this makes cellphone radiation a relatively unlikely culprit as a mutation-causing
agent. Nonetheless, biologists have exposed mice and rats to chronic nonionizing radiation
(comparable to that emitted by phones) to determine whether it causes cancer. In rats prone
to developing breast cancer, there was no acceleration of breast cancer. In another
experiment, rats were treated with a chemical carcinogen in utero (to “prime” them to
develop brain tumors) and then exposed to radiant energy comparable to cellphone
radiation for two hours per day, four days a week, for 22 months. The experiment revealed
no increased incidence of brain tumors in rats. Nor was there any accelerated growth in
previously established brain tumors. From 1997 to 2004, six independent experiments on
mice and rats studied the effects of chronic radiation on brain cancer. No experiment
revealed an increased risk of brain cancer.
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But radiant energy need not penetrate the brain and mutate genes to have a biological effect
on it. A cellphone user might experience changes in physiology that have nothing to do with
the ionizing capacity of radiation. Might a cellphone leave a physiological mark on the brain
through a yet unknown mechanism?
A recent study by Nora Volkow, published in The Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA) and reported in this newspaper on March 30, has raised this unusual
possibility. Volkow is an innovative brain researcher who is director of the National Institute
on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, Md. She recruited 47 people and placed an “active” phone next
to one ear (the phone was on — generating radiation, but silent, so that Volkow could
eliminate the effects of sound and conversation). She then used a specialized brain scanner
capable of detecting alterations in glucose. Glucose — a sugar — is the metabolic fuel for the
brain. When parts of the brain are activated, brain cells begin to metabolize glucose at an
increased rate. Volkow’s scanner was equipped to detect even marginal changes in glucose
metabolism.
When Volkow compared subjects with phones turned on with subjects who had their phones
turned off, she found a striking pattern: there was a telltale sign of increased brain-glucose
activity in the area of the brain immediately adjacent to the antenna of the phone.
But as Volkow points out, there is still a long conceptual leap from “increased brain-glucose
activity” to “brain cancer.” Our brains are constantly altering the metabolism of sugar — the
flux of glucose changes when we remember Grandma’s house in Texas or listen to Bach or
smell roses. When human beings dream during sleep, the increase in glucose metabolism in
some parts of the brain is just as striking as the increase found in Volkow’s study with
phones. “It’s not a dramatic increase,” she says. “When our eye responds to a visual cue,
glucose metabolism in the brain increases much more dramatically” — and, surely, we do not
think that visual stimulation causes cancer. Her study proves, importantly, that cellphone
radiation has a biological effect on the brain. But whether this effect is consequential —
whether it causes cancer or, for that matter, protects against it — is entirely speculative.
The most exquisite — and arguably the most sensitive — means to identify a carcinogen is to
study the effects of the substance not on humans or animals but on cells. In the 1970s, a
Berkeley biochemist named Bruce Ames devised a cellular test to do just that. Ames’s test is
based on a series of simple principles. Normal cells in the body grow through cell division, or
mitosis, which is carefully regulated by genes. Certain genes accelerate growth, while other
genes dampen or stop it. Cancer originates when the “accelerator” genes are permanently
activated or when the “brake” genes are permanently damaged. Since genes are encoded by
DNA, chemicals that mutate DNA — mutagens — can alter the growth-controlling genes and
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thereby cause cancer. Ames devised a special strain of bacterial cells that act as a “sensor” for
mutations and therefore can also detect mutagenic chemicals. Chemical mutagens are so
commonly carcinogenic that versions of the Ames test represent the gold standard by which
most carcinogens are found.
Cellphone radiation is not a chemical, of course, but the rules about mutagenicity still apply
(X-rays, for instance, are known to cause cancer and are detectable by Ames’s test).
Laboratory experiments that link phone radiation to DNA mutation using a version of the
Ames test have been largely contradictory. In 2005, a panel of experts, including a
biomedical engineer, an epidemiologist, a genetic toxicologist and a radiation biologist,
published a review of nearly 1,700 scientific papers on the cellular effects of radiation
emitted by phones. In the review of more than 50 experiments linking phone radiation to
DNA damage in animal or bacterial cells, evidence of damage has been negative in more
than two-thirds of the studies. Since nonionizing radiation cannot directly affect the
structure of DNA, experiments linking phone radiation to DNA damage are generally
unconvincing. The most striking study linking cellular phone radiation to DNA damage,
published in 2005 by researchers from the Medical University of Vienna, has recently been
embroiled in even deeper scientific controversy: researchers studying the data intensively
have argued that the original study is fraudulent.
But it is possible for something to be a carcinogen without directly damaging DNA. Some
chemicals might activate growth pathways or survival pathways in cancer cells (eventually
damaging DNA and mutating genes — but indirectly). Exogenous estrogen, for instance,
activates growth pathways in breast cells and can cause breast cancer but doesn’t damage
DNA. Others may provoke inflammation, creating a physiological milieu in the body that
allows malignant cells to grow and survive. Yet others — the class of substances that we
know least about — might not damage DNA directly but chemically modify genes so that
their regulation is changed. These substances are like the dark matter of the carcinogenic
world: they are barely visible to our current tests for carcinogens and thus lie at the
boundaries of the knowable universe. Cellphones and their radiation have been tested for
many of these properties — for instance, their ability to chemically modify DNA without
causing mutations — but evidence linking this form of radiation to such cellular changes
remains largely negative.
In the expert panel’s 2005 review, the authors summarized the evidence: “There is little
theoretical basis for anticipating that RF energy [from cellular phones] would have
significant biological effects at the power levels used by modern mobile phones and their
base station antennas. The epidemiological evidence for a causal association between cancer
and RF energy is weak and limited. Animal studies have provided no consistent evidence
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that exposure to RF energy at nonthermal intensities causes or promotes cancer. Extensive
in vitro studies have found no consistent evidence of [DNA damage] potential, but in vitro
studies assessing the epigenetic potential of RF energy are limited. Over all, a weight-ofevidence evaluation shows that the current evidence for a causal association between cancer
and exposure to RF energy is weak and unconvincing.”
The word “carcinogen,” it is believed, was first coined by the surgeon James Paget in an
obscure passage of a lecture on surgical pathology in 1853. Paget asked if there is “one
material for cancer, one carcinogen,” that “may form different but closely allied
compounds?”
Our vision of carcinogenesis has become vastly more complex since 1853. We now know that
there is no “one cancer.” Breast, lung, prostate and blood cancer share a similarity — the
uncontrolled growth of cells — but the specific genes and behaviors of these cancers are far
from identical.
Nor is there “one material for cancer” — one archetypal carcinogen. Agents that cause cancer
are chemically diverse and cancer-specific. Estrogen can provoke cancer in the breast, but
destroys prostate-cancer cells; vinyl chloride is exquisitely carcinogenic to the liver but not
to the skin; chlorine and nitrogen mustard are both poison gases, but only one causes
leukemia.
Notably, there is also no “one test” for carcinogens. Scientific studies to capture the
association between an agent and cancer cast an astonishingly wide net. On one end of that
spectrum lie populationwide human trials involving hundreds of thousands of men and
women. On the other end are precise laboratory experiments that plumb the molecular
depths of cells and genes. The tests range from the telescopic to microscopic, from statistics
to biochemistry — from observations of chimney sweeps to bacteria on a petri dish. Often
one test must be corroborated by another. Asbestos and tobacco were identified by casecontrol studies and validated in animal models. Estrogens were implicated by studies on
human and animal physiology and then found to be carcinogenic in prospective human
trials.
Finding a carcinogen, in short, is not like solving a mathematical equation, with a single
formula and solution. It is more like solving an epic detective case, with individual pieces of
evidence that, taken together, suggest a common culprit.
But thus far, this extraordinarily wide-cast net has yet to find solid proof of risk for cellphone
radiation: not a single trial or test that has attributed carcinogenic potential has been free of
problems. Populationwide studies have failed to demonstrate an increased incidence;
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retrospective trials have been contradictory and riddled with biases; animal studies negative;
human physiological experiments inconclusive; cellular studies inconsistent and weak. What
is clearly needed, experts agree, is a single, definitive, unbiased study — “one trial,” to
borrow Paget’s terminology. Logistically speaking, the simplest such human trial is a casecontrol study that compares cancer patients with healthy patients, using phone-log data that
companies have thus far been reluctant to provide. The simplest animal study involves
subjecting rats and mice to long-term exposure to cellphone radiation. The National
Toxicology Program has begun such a study. Cellphone radiation will be turned on and off
for 10-minute stretches for 20 hours each day. This experiment — the closest we will get to
making mice use actual cellphones — is likely to be published in 2014.
It is possible, of course, that even these sophisticated experiments will be unable to
determine the risk. The lag time of cancer development with phone use may be 50 or 70
years — and cellphones have been around for only three decades or so. Yet even a slowlagging cancer is unlikely to arise at a single point in time after exposure. Like most
biological phenomena, cancer risk typically rides a statistical curve, with some patients
developing cancer early, others peaking in the middle and yet others trailing off decades
later. Thus far, no such statistical curve has been evident for brain cancer.
Might the cellphone industry have already performed such experiments and conspired to
keep real data on brain cancers from us — just as the tobacco industry conspired to
obfuscate real data on tobacco and carcinogenesis in the 1950s? It’s possible, but there are
important differences in comparing these trials with the tobacco studies. With smoking,
despite active attempts by the industry to stifle data, the epidemiological trials were
incontrovertibly positive, human physiological data markedly suggestive and animal studies
(including Roffo’s painted-rabbit experiment) striking.
As we await the definitive trial, then, it’s probably wise to also start thinking differently
about the cause of Susan Reynard’s cancer. When a suspected cause for a devastating illness
begins to slip away, there is often frustration and turmoil, paranoia and nihilism. In a short
story by Lorrie Moore, the mother of a toddler with cancer rattles off a list of potential causes
of her child’s illness — “giant landfills, agricultural run-off”; “lurid water”; “toxic potatoes”;
“Joe McCarthy’s grave.”
The trouble with this kind of grasping is that it is indiscriminate. In truth, many substances
of modern life do not — cannot — cause cancer. Some do, and it’s absolutely critical to
identify and reduce exposure to them. Others don’t, and it’s absolutely worthwhile
identifying these, so that we can focus on the real carcinogens around us. If we lump
everything into the category of “potentially carcinogenic,” from toxic potatoes to McCarthy’s
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grave, then our scientific language around cancer begins to degenerate. The effect is like
crying “wolf” about cancer: the public progressively numbs itself to real environmental
toxins and becomes disinvested in finding bona fide carcinogens.
To keep ourselves on the right path on environmental carcinogens, then, we need not just
standards to rule carcinogens “in” but also standards to rule them “out.” The final, definitive
trials on phone radiation may settle this issue — but, as of now, the evidence remains far
from convincing. Understanding the rigor, labor, evidence and time required to identify a
real carcinogen is the first step to understanding what does and does not cause cancer.
Siddhartha Mukherjee (smukherj2011@gmail.com) is an assistant professor of medicine in the
division of medical oncology at Columbia University. He is the author of “Emperor of All
Maladies: A Biography of Cancer.” Editor: Ilena Silverman (i.silvermanMagGroup@nytimes.com).
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