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A new study in mice provides the first evidence that long-term exposure to electromagnetic waves generated by cellphones may prevent, and possibly reverse, Alzheimer's disease.
The energy waves generated by standard cellphones not only had "profound effects" on the memories of both normal mice and mice destined to get Alzheimer's; it reduced the accumulation of a toxic protein in the brain that is believed by most people to be the main bad thing that goes wrong in the brain to cause Alzheimer's.
In other words, it changed the physical brain damage caused by a disease. It reversed it.
The serendipitous finding, published in the January edition of the Journal of Alzheimer's disease, astonished the researchers.
"I actually thought exposing our Alzheimer's mice to cellphone-level electromagnetic fields would exacerbate the onset of Alzheimer's. And it did just the opposite," said lead author Gary Arendash, a University of South Florida research professor at the Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Centre.
Months of cellphone exposure also boosted memory function of normal, non-demented mice.
While concerns have been raised about a potential link between cellphones and brain cancer, the study suggests that not only is cellphone use not harmful to brain cells, it may protect them. The researchers found no evidence of damage to blood cells, nor did the treatment induce tumours in the brain. All body tissues appeared normal.
"Despite numerous studies, there is no definitive evidence that high-frequency electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure is a risk to human health," the researchers say. "To the contrary, this report presents the first evidence that long-term EMF exposure directly associated with cellphone use provides cognitive benefit." Read more: canada.com
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