Cellular phone irradiation of the head affects heart rate variability depending on inspiration/expiration ratio

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Abstract

Background: Mobile phones may have harmful health effects and clinical examinations report ambiguous results of exposure concerning neurophysiological and cardiovascular actions. Materials and Methods: This study investigated heart rate asymmetry (HRA) and heart rate variability (HRV) parameters with 1:2 and 1:1 metronomepaced inspiration/expiration ratios during short-term 1,800MHz GSM cellular phone exposure in 20 healthy volunteers. Results: Significant HRA changes by Porta and Guzik indices were not found on exposure compared to sham exposure. Time-domain HRV parameters on exposure showed significant differences at 1:1 paced, but not at 1:2 paced breathing compared to sham exposure. A mild post-exposure effect was observed regarding root mean square of successive RR-differences. Conclusion: The findings reflect persisting acute effects of GSM handset emission on the autonomic nervous system. Exploring its influences on health status and survival needs further studies. Symmetrical breathing can be used as a sensitizing factor in other HRV/HRA analysis studies.

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APA

Béres, S., Németh, Á., Ajtay, Z., Kiss, I., Németh, B., & Hejjel, L. (2018). Cellular phone irradiation of the head affects heart rate variability depending on inspiration/expiration ratio. In Vivo, 32(5), 1145–1153. https://doi.org/10.21873/invivo.11357

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