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Feature Article:
Cell Phone Tumor?
Long-term use increases the risk
of developing tumors, new research indicates.
Study Details Cell Phone Dangers. Scarlet Pruitt,
IDG News Service
Ten or more years of mobile phone use can
dramatically increase the risk of developing a benign tumor on the auditory
nerve, according to a new study.
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Some Interesting Facts about Cell Phones
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Cell Phone Tumor and Cancer?
The study, conducted by the
Institute of Environmental Medicine at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm found
that the risk of developing the tumors, known as acoustic neuromas, almost
doubled for persons who started using their mobile phone at least 10 years
before diagnosis.
What's more, the risk increase was confined to the side of the head where the
phone was usually held, according to results of the study released this week.
The study of around 150 acoustic
neuroma patients and 600 healthy control patients could be used to confirm
long-held fears that cell phones are bad for users' health.
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What can I use to
protect myself from cell phone tumor and radiation
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Researchers point out, however,
that only analog phones had been in use for more than a decade at the time the
study was conducted, and that they could not determine if the same results would
apply to the long-term use of digital phones.
Preliminary Results
The institute's report was released as part of a larger international study
known as Interphone, coordinated by the World Health Organization's cancer
research institute. The results of the Swedish study need to be confirmed in
additional studies before final conclusions can be drawn, the researchers note.
The results, although preliminary, are concerning. In addition to a doubling of
acoustic neuroma risk for long-term cell phone users, researchers says that when
they took into account the side of the head, they found that the risk was almost
four times higher on the side where the cell phone was normally used.
Acoustic neuromas usually grow over a period of years before being diagnosed and
occur in less than one adult per 100,000, per year, the researchers say.
The Interphone study will take into account the study on acoustic neuromas,
along with a number of other types of brain cancer in assessing the risk of
low-level exposure to radio frequency magnetic fields. The research is being
concentrated in countries that have the longest and highest use of mobile
phones, such as Sweden, the U.K., Denmark, Norway, and Germany.
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