Study overviews

Mobile phone related articles are

Please note that a publication can be assigned to several endpoints, i.e. the sum of publications from the individual thematic points and subpoints can be greater than the total sum of actual publications.

Experimental studies on mobile communications

1743 studies in total
  1. 770 studies
  2. 584 studies
  3. 519 studies
  4. 228 studies
  5. 208 studies
  6. 118 studies

Health

770 studies in total
  1. 157 studies
  2. 95 studies
  3. 86 studies
  4. 84 studies
  5. 80 studies
  6. 62 studies
  7. 59 studies
  8. 55 studies
  9. 54 studies
  10. 48 studies
  11. 34 studies
  12. 28 studies
  13. 26 studies
  14. 19 studies
  15. 16 studies
  16. 11 studies
  17. 9 studies
  18. 4 studies
Authors Year Exposed system Endpoints Frequency range SAR Exposure duration Parameters
Heikkinen P et al. 2003 animal, mouse/transgenic of the line K2 (over-expressing the human ODC gene) and non-transgenic littermate, whole body skin tumours 849 MHz 0.5–4 W/kg repeated daily exposure for 1.5 h/day, 5 days/week for 52 weeks digital mobile phone, GSM, D-AMPS, mobile communications
Sanchez S et al. 2006 animal, rat/hairless (IFFA CREDO), partial body: back effects on skin 900 MHz 2.5–5 W/kg repeated daily exposure, 2 h/day, 5 days/week, for 12 weeks GSM, mobile communications
Ayata A et al. 2004 animal, rat/Wistar albino, whole body skin damage 900 MHz - repeated daily exposure, 30 min/day for 10 days mobile communications, mobile phone
Özgüner F et al. 2004 animal, rat/Wistar albino, whole body histopathologic changes in skin 900 MHz 2 W/kg repeated daily exposure, 30 min/day for 10 days GSM, mobile communications
Huang TQ et al. 2005 animal, mouse/ICR, whole body skin tumors 848.5 MHz 0.4 W/kg repeated daily exposure, 45 min on/15 min off/45 min on, 5 days/week for 19 weeks PCS, CDMA, mobile communications
Imaida K et al. 2001 animal, mouse/ICR, partial body: skin skin tumors 1.49 GHz 0.084–2 W/kg repeated daily exposure, 90 min/day, 5 days/week for 19 weeks PDC, TDMA, mobile communications