Experimental studies on the effects of young animals include studies with young animals prenatally or postnatally (before or after hatching) exposed to electromagnetic fields.
Young animals in this spirit means animals of the whole animal kingdom (but in this context mainly mammals and birds), exposed and investigated before their adulthood.
The graphics also include some experimental studies with children.
Authors | Year | Exposed system | Endpoints | Frequency range | SAR | Exposure duration | Parameters |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Laudisi F et al. | 2012 | animal, mouse/C57BL/6, whole body: <i>in utero</i> | pregnancy outcome, number/proliferation of T-cells in thymus and spleen (peripheral T-cells), cytokine production | 2,451–2,473 MHz | 4 W/kg | continuous for 2 h/day on 14 consecutive days (starting 5 days after mating, ending 1 day before expected delivery) | RF field, W-LAN/WiFi |
De Paepe S et al. | 2023 | - | - | 5.4 GHz | - | - | RF field |
Chalfin S et al. | 2002 | animal, rhesus monkey (<i>Macaca mulatta</i>), partial body: eye | effects on eye/ocular examination | 35 GHz | - | 1.5 s to 5 s | millimeter waves, PW pulsed wave |
Habauzit D et al. | 2020 | - | - | 94 GHz | - | - | millimeter waves |
Fedorov VI et al. | 2015 | - | - | 0.1–2.2 THz | - | - | TeraHz |
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