Beware! A 10-min cellphone chat may trigger cancer

August    30, 2007 18:34 IST

Just 10 minutes of chatting on cellular phones is enough to trigger such 
chemical changes in the brain that can increase the risk of cancer, warn 
scientists.

A study by the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel has shown that even low 
levels of radiation from handsets interfere with the process of cell division,
which encourages the growth of tumours. 

Although the researchers have yet not found any evidence that signals from cell 
phones are harmful, their findings suggest they may be. 

Also read: 
30 mins/day on mobile may harm hearing

Several studies have been conducted to find an association between mobile use 
and brain tumours, but they neither found any such link nor any dramatic rise
in cancer rates. 

Ever since the inception of mobile phones, the official advice has been that 
the device are safe. The guidance is based on the assumption that the phones
emit too little radiation to heat the brain dangerously. 

The new study, however, suggests that "nonthermal" radiation can pose a risk. 

In lab tests, the researchers exposed human and rat cells to low-level 
radiation at 875 megahertz, a similar frequency to the one used in many mobile 
phones.


Despite being weaker than emissions from a typical handset, the radiation began 
to switch on a chemical signal inside the cells within ten minutes, say
the researchers. The chemical signals detected were involved in the division of 
cells, they add. 

The researchers also claimed to have found a separate way in which mobile 
phones can damage health.

"The significance lies in showing cells do react to cellphone radiation in a 
non-thermal way," the Daily Mail quoted Dr Rony Seger, a co-author of the study
published in the Biochemical Journal, as telling New Scientist magazine.

ANI

http://www.rediff.com/news/2007/aug/30cell.htm

Vikas Kapoor,
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Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.
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