Pulsed high-frequency electromagnetic field affects human sleep and sleep electroencephalogram.

A A Borbély, R Huber, T Graf, B Fuchs, E Gallmann, P Achermann
Author Information
  1. A A Borbély: Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Zürich, Switzerland. borbely@pharma.unizh.ch

Abstract

To investigate whether the electromagnetic field (EMF) emitted by digital radiotelephone handsets affects the brain, healthy, young subjects were exposed during an entire night-time sleep episode to an intermittent radiation schedule (900 MHz; maximum specific absorption rate 1 W/kg) consisting of alternating 15-min on-15-min off intervals. Compared with a control night with sham exposure, the amount of waking after sleep onset was reduced from 18 to 12 min. Spectral power of the electroencephalogram in non-rapid eye movement sleep was increased. The maximum rise occurred in the 10-11 Hz and 13.5-14 Hz bands during the initial part of sleep and then subsided. The results demonstrate that pulsed high-frequency EMF in the range of radiotelephones may promote sleep and modify the sleep EEG.

MeSH Term

Adult
Analysis of Variance
Brain
Cross-Over Studies
Double-Blind Method
Electroencephalography
Electromagnetic Fields
Humans
Male
Sleep Stages

Word Cloud

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