Mobieletelefoon voorkomt Alzheimer?

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In een lab setting hebben onderzoekers muizen blootgesteld aan de 900Mhz band waar mobieletelefonie gebruik van maakt. En wat bleek? De muizen die blootgesteld waren deden het beter op geheugentesten dan de muizen die geen straling hadden gekregen. Hieronder het persbericht van Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease over deze opzienbarende ontdekking.

The millions of people who spend hours every day on a cell phone, may have a new excuse for yakking. A surprising new study in mice provides the first evidence that long-term exposure to electromagnetic waves associated with cell phone use may actually protect against, and even reverse, Alzheimer’s disease. The study, led by University of South Florida researchers at the Florida Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC), was published today in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.

“It surprised us to find that cell phone exposure, begun in early adulthood, protects the memory of mice otherwise destined to develop Alzheimer’s symptoms,” said lead author Gary Arendash, PhD, Research Professor at the Florida ADRC. “It was even more astonishing that the electromagnetic waves generated by cell phones actually reversed memory impairment in old Alzheimer’s mice.”

The researchers showed that exposing old Alzheimer’s mice to electromagnetic waves generated by cell phones erased brain deposits of the harmful protein beta-amyloid, in addition to preventing the protein’s build-up in younger Alzheimer’s mice. The sticky brain plaques formed by the abnormal accumulation of beta amyloid are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Most treatments against Alzheimer’s try to target beta-amyloid.

The highly-controlled study allowed researchers to isolate the effects of cell phone exposure on memory from other lifestyle factors such as diet and exercise. It involved 96 mice, most of which were genetically altered to develop beta-amyloid plaques and memory problems mimicking Alzheimer’s disease as they aged. Some mice were non-demented, without any genetic predisposition for Alzheimer’s, so researchers could test the effects of electromagnetic waves on normal memory as well.

Both the Alzheimer’s and normal mice were exposed to the electromagnetic field generated by standard cell phone use for two 1-hour periods each day for seven to nine months. The mice didn’t wear tiny headsets or have scientists holding cell phones up to their ears; instead, their cages were arranged around a centrally-located antenna generating the cell phone signal. Each animal was housed the same distance from the antenna and exposed to electromagnetic waves typically emitted by a cell phone pressed up against a human head.

If cell phone exposure was started when the genetically-programmed mice were young adults — before signs of memory impairment were apparent — their cognitive ability was protected. In fact, the Alzheimer’s mice performed as well on tests measuring memory and thinking skills as aged mice without dementia. If older Alzheimer’s mice already exhibiting memory problems were exposed to the electromagnetic waves, their memory impairment disappeared. Months of cell phone exposure even boosted the memories of normal mice to above-normal levels. The memory benefits of cell phone exposure took months to show up, suggesting that a similar effect in humans would take years if cell phone-level electromagnetic exposure was provided.

Based on their promising and unexpected findings in mice, the researchers concluded that electromagnetic field exposure could be an effective, non-invasive and drug-free way to prevent and treat Alzheimer’s disease in humans. They are currently evaluating whether different sets of electromagnetic frequencies and strengths will produce more rapid and even greater cognitive benefits than those found in their current study.

“If we can determine the best set of electromagnetic parameters to effectively prevent beta-amyloid aggregation and remove pre-existing beta amyloid deposits from the brain, this technology could be quickly translated to human benefit against AD” said USF’s Chuanhai Cao, PhD, the other major study author. “Since production and aggregation of beta-amyloid occurs in traumatic brain injury, particularly in soldiers during war, the therapeutic impact of our findings may extend beyond Alzheimer’s disease.”

The memory test used to evaluate the effects of cell phone exposure in mice was closely designed from a sensitive test used to determine if Alzheimer’s disease, or its very early signs (mild cognitive impairment), are present in humans. “Since we selected electromagnetic parameters that were identical to human cell phone use and tested mice in a task closely analogous to a human memory test, we believe our findings could have considerable relevance to humans,” Arendash said.

The researchers found a slight increase in brain temperature during the two one-hour periods when mice were exposed to electromagnetic waves each day. This increase in brain temperature was seen only in the Alzheimer’s mice, and only after months of exposure. The researchers suggest the increase in brain temperature helped the Alzheimer’s brain to remove newly-formed beta-amyloid by causing brain cells to release it.

The researchers were particularly surprised to discover that months of cell phone exposure actually boosted the memory of non-demented (normal mice) to above-normal levels. They suspect that the main reason for this improvement involves the ability of electromagnetic exposure to increase brain activity, promoting greater blood flow and increased energy metabolism in the brain. “Our study provides evidence that long-term cell phone use is not harmful to brain,” Dr. Cao said. “To the contrary, the electromagnetic waves emitted by cell phones could actually improve normal memory and be an effective therapy against memory impairment”

“It will take some time to determine the exact mechanisms involved in these beneficial memory effects,” Arendash said. “One thing is clear, however – the cognitive benefits of long-term electromagnetic exposure are real, because we saw them in both protection- and treatment-based experiments involving Alzheimer’s mice, as well as in normal mice.”

Previous human studies of electromagnetic waves from cell phones involved only brief exposures given to normal humans. While some studies reported small improvements in attention or memory (not enough to impact daily life), others reported no memory effects from short-term exposure. The new study by Arendash, Cao, and their colleagues is the first to investigate the effects of long-term electromagnetic exposure over many months on memory function in either humans or animals. The findings indicate that “long-term” exposure to cell phone level electromagnetic waves is needed to observe enhanced memory in normal or memory-impaired mice.

The USF researchers began investigating the effects of cell phone use on Alzheimer’s disease several years ago, after several observational studies in humans linked a possible increased risk of Alzheimer’s with “low-frequency” electromagnetic exposure — like the energy waves generated by power and telephone lines. However, cell phones emit “high-frequency” electromagnetic waves, which are very different because they can have beneficial effects on brain cell function, such as increasing brain cell activity, Arendash said.

There has been recent controversy about whether electromagnetic waves from cell phones cause brain cancer. Some researchers argue that the risk of glioma (40 percent of all brain tumors) doubles after 10 or more years of cell phone use. However, others argue that since the overall lifetime risk of developing a brain tumor of any type is less than 1 percent, any doubling of this risk would still be very low. Groups such as the World Health Organization, the American Cancer Society, and the National Institutes of Health, have all concluded that scientific evidence to date does not support any adverse health effects associated with the use of cell phones. Consistent with the view of these organizations, the researchers found no autopsy evidence of abnormal growth in brains of the Alzheimer’s mice following many months of exposure to cell phone-level electromagnetic waves. They also found all major peripheral organs, such as the liver and lungs, to be normal.

The research was conducted by an interdisciplinary group of neuroscientists, electrical engineers, and neurologists from universities in Japan and China as well as from the Florida ADRC at the University of South Florida. The studies were supported by funds from the Florida ADRC, a statewide project sponsored by the National Institute on Aging.

Note to Editors: Copy of journal article available upon request.

Electromagnetic Field Treatment Protects Against and Reverses Cognitive Impairment in Alzheimer’s Disease Mice. Gary W. Arendash, Juan Sanchez-Ramos, Takashi Mori, Malgorzata Mamcarz, Xiaoyang Lin, Melissa Runfeldt, Li Want, Guixin Zhang, Vasyl Sava, Juan Tan and Chuanhai Cao. Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, Volume 19:1 (January 2010).

Mobiel bellen veroorzaakt GEEN kanker!

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De enorme toename in mobiel bellen midden jaren negentig heeft geen invloed gehad op de incidentie van hersentumoren. De vroegere tendens heeft zich volgens een studie in Journal of the National Cancer Institute (2009;101:1-4) tot 2003 onveranderd doorgezet, wat zeggen wil dat de eerste bezitters van een mobiele telefoon 10 jaar onbezorgd hebben kunnen bellen.

Dat de elektromagnetische straling die van een mobiele telefoon uitgaat op de een of andere manier de hersenen schaden is een wijdverbreide angst, waar geen bewijs voor is. Maar het tegenbewijs is evenmin moeilijk te leveren. Wel lijkt het erop dat een epidemie van hersentumoren tot nu toe is uitgebleven. Dit blijkt uit ook de nieuwe cijfers van de Scandinavische kankerregisters, die Isabelle Deltour van de Deense Kankerbestrijding en collega’s hebben uitgewerkt.

Midden jaren negentig lanceerde het Zweedse Ericsson goedkope mobiele telefoons die in Denemarken, Finland, Noorwegen en Zweden massaal werden aangeschaft. Als mobiel bellen het risico op een hersentumor zou vergroten, moet dit terug te vinden zijn in een toename van incidentie. Maar uit onderzoek onder 16 miljoen Scandinaviërs blijkt geen sprake van een oorzakelijk verband.

In de 4 Scandinavische landen werd de trend in de incidentie van het glioom en het meningeoom onderzocht in de periode 1974-2003. Vanaf 1974 tot 2003 steeg de incidentie jaarlijks met 0,5% bij mannen en met 0,2% bij vrouwen. De incidentie van het meningeoom steeg per jaar met 0,8% bij mannen en na 1990 met 3,8% bij vrouwen. In de tijdsspanne 1998-2003 – de periode waarin een eventueel verband tussen het gebruik van de mobiele telefoon en kankerrisico informatie geeft over een gebruiksperiode van 5 tot 10 jaar (de zogenoemde inductieperiode) – bleven beide trends gelijk. Voor en na introductie van de mobiele telefoon was er dus geen verschil in beide kankertrends. Wel werd begin jaren negentig een stijging zichtbaar van meningeoom bij vrouwen, maar dit is volgens de onderzoekers niet het gevolg van invoering van de mobiele telefoon, maar eerder doordat een groot deel van de vrouwen tot de leeftijdsgroep 60-79 behoort. Immers het netwerk voor mobiele telefonie (GSM) werd pas in 1992 in Scandinavië geïntroduceerd. Pas daarna kwam mobiel bellen in een stroomversnelling.

Uitblijven van een effect betekent niet dat de straling niet schadelijk is, waarschuwen de onderzoekers. Mogelijk is de inductieperiode langer of is het risico alleen verhoogd in bepaalde groepen mensen.

Bron: NTvG

Twitter weekoverzicht van 2009-04-13

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Twitter dagoverzicht van 2009-04-08

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Zorgkantoor:
“Nee het kost ons 6 tot 12 week voor we het geld van uw pgb met een looptijd van 12 week gaan overmaken.”

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