Title of article :
The Effects of WiFi Network (2.45 GHz) on Rats with Induced Stroke Associated with an Increased Risk of Heart Attack
Author/Authors :
Montzeri, Alireza Department of Biology - School of Basic Sciences - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Pooladi, Mehdi Department of Biology - School of Basic Sciences - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Odoumizadeh, Mohsen Department of Biology - School of Basic Sciences - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Nazarian, Niloofar Department of Biology - School of Basic Sciences - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Karani, Soheila Department of Biology - School of Basic Sciences - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran
Abstract :
Introduction: Stroke and heart attack are the most common causes of death
among humans. Troponin I, Creatine Kinae-MB (CK-MB) and Lactate
Dehydrogenase (LDH) are the diagnostic markers of heart attack which can
also be used as high risk biomarkers. WiFi is a cheap common technology
which exposes its users to a spectrum of electromagnetic waves. Can weak
electromagnetic waves affect human health?
Materials and Methods: In this study, stroke in rats has been induced, and
then they were exposed to WiFi waves (2.45 GHz) and finally were examined
for the risk of heart attack through analyzing three enzyme biomarkers related
to heart attack (Troponin I, CK-MB and LDH).
Results: This study’s results confirm WiFi’s biological effects and shows
WiFi’s contribution in stroke. WiFi2.45GHz exposure affects three cardiac
enzyme markers of heart attack (LDH, Troponin I and CK-MB), considering
the current data on WiFi exposure effects on the brain, heart and related
enzymes.
Conclusion: Some of the WiFi wave’s cellular targets include cell membrane,
cellular proteins and enzymes. Despite all the data and reports on biological
effects of electromagnetic fields, the range and rate of these effects has not yet been determined.
Keywords :
Stroke , Heart attack , Troponin I , CK-MB , LDH , WiFi
Journal title :
Archives of Advances in Biosciences