----- Original Message -----
*From:* Eileen O'Connor
*Sent:* Thursday, November 08, 2007 12:39 PM
*Subject:* Adlkofer suggests connection between ERK-cascade
and
DNA-damage by EMF
Adlkofer was the leader
of the Reflex-project (?Risk evaluation of
potential environmental hazards from low energy
electromagnetic fields
exposure using sensitive in vitro methods'). The research
found a
significant increase of DNA-breaking and micro-nuclei in
certain cells
influenced by non-thermal high frequency fields. The Chinese
researcher
Xu (a member of a committee of ICNIRP) had found the same
before in
2005. The observations were
confirmed by Schär of the University of
Basel, Switzerland, but could not be
confirmed by Speit of the
University of Ulm, Germany. Why not, is unclear. As a matter
of fact,
many more scientists found a significant increase of
DNA-breaking, among
them Gandhi in India, who tested in vivo (living people with
and without
mobile phone)
Source: www.microwavenews.com, 15 November 2010
Just last year, Switzerland's Primo Schär reported significant DNA fragmentation at 1mT. (See also "Faulty DNA Repair May Explain EMF Role in Childhood Leukemia.") Is anyone going to hold ICNIRP accountable for these errors and biases?
Meanwhile, the REFLEX study under Professor F. Adlkofer, was making measurements on isolated cells to see if these were effected by a high or low-frequency (power-line frequency) EMF (electro-magnetic field). Quoting from the report: "The main goal of the REFLEX project was to investigate the effects of EMF on single cells in vitro at the molecular level below the energy density reflected by the present safety levels."[5] The study showed that in certain human cell types there was indeed a significant increase in the number of single- and double-strand breaks in the DNA as a result of high [6] and extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields [5].
These results fascinated Professor Primo Schaer at the Center for Biomedicine at the University of Basel. In a talk at a meeting on June 29 of this year, organized by the Swiss Research Foundation for Mobile Communication (my remark: funded by the phone industry), Professor Schaer gave a preliminary report on his own experiments which confirm the work in Vienna, showing that intermittent extremely low frequency fields can result in damage to DNA. At this point in time these research results are unpublished; but, when published, we will report on them here in ERCIM News. Professor Schaer emphasized that some DNA damages are repaired by the DNA repair mechanism. Thus, the observed genotoxic effects do not necessarily mean that EMF is carcinogenic for the human.
Ercim News 67, October 2006