Title of article :
Pre-Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields and Induction of Radioadaptive Response in Rats Irradiated with High Doses of X-Rays
Author/Authors :
Borzoueisileh ، Sajad Cellular and Molecular Biology Research Center, Health Research Institute, Student Research Committee - Babol University of Medical Sciences , Shabestani Monfared ، Ali Cancer Research Center, Health Research Institute - Babol University of Medical Sciences , Mortazavi ، Mohammad Javad Department of Medical Physics and Engineering - School of Medicine - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Zabihi ، Ebrahim Cellular and Molecular Biology Research Center, Health Research Institute - Babol University of Medical Sciences , Pouramir ، Mehdi Cellular and Molecular Biology Research Center, Health Research Institute - Babol University of Medical Sciences , Niksirat ، Fatemeh Department of Medical Physics Radiobiology and Radiation Protection - School of Medicine - Babol University of Medical Sciences , Seyfizadeh ، Nayer Stem Cell Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Shafiee ، Mohsen Cellular and Molecular Research Center - Yasuj University of Medical Sciences
From page :
505
To page :
512
Abstract :
Background: Some evidence shows that a pre-exposure to RF can mitigate the effects of subsequent exposures to high doses of ionizing radiation. Objective: We aimed to assess the effect of a pre-exposure to non-ionizing RF radiation on survival, weight changes, food consumption, and water intake of lethally irradiated rats. Material and Methods: In this case-control study, we used a commercial mobile phone (GSM, 900/1800 MHz) as well as a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi router as the sources of pre-exposure to RF radiation. Forty-eight rats were randomly divided into six groups of control, “8 Gy X-rays”, mobile phone, “mobile phone+8 Gy”, Wi-Fi, and “Wi-Fi+8 Gy”. Then, the survival fraction, weight loss, water, and food consumption changes were compared in different groups. Results: The survival analysis indicated that the survival rates in all of the exposed animals (“8 Gy X-rays”, “mobile phone+8 Gy”, “Wi-Fi+8 Gy”) were significantly lower than the control, “Wi-Fi”, and “mobile phone” groups. The changes in survival rates of “mobile+8 Gy”, “Wi-Fi+8 Gy”, and 8 Gy alone were not statistically significant. However, food and water intake were significantly affected by exposure to both RF pre-exposures and exposure to high dose ionizing radiation. Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, the existence of a dose window for the induction of AR can be the cause of the lack of AR in our experiment. Our findings confirm that in a similar pattern with the adaptive responses induced by pre-exposure to ionizing radiation, the induction of adaptive response by RF-pre-exposures requires a minimum level of damage to trigger adaptive phenomena.
Keywords :
Radiofrequency Radiation (RF) , Radioadaptive Response , Cell Phone , Electromagnetic Radiation , Survival analysis
Journal title :
Journal of Biomedical Physics and Engineering
Journal title :
Journal of Biomedical Physics and Engineering
Record number :
2730697
Link To Document :
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