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With the enormous increase of electromagnetic and radio wave radiation, increasing
numbers of illnesses such as allergies, neurodermatitis, fatigue, asthma, heart
disease, brain cancer, depression, sleep disorders and ill temper are on the rise.
In 1994, Nobel prize winners Alfred Gilman and Martin Rodbell determined that the
body's cells communicate with each other by subtle low electromagnetic signals.
These signals carry all the vital information that, through the process of transduction,
are translated into biochemical and physiological processes of the body.
EMF can potentially distort and disrupt these cellular communication signals
resulting in abnormal cellular metabolism and consequently illness.
Adelaide Hospital animal study found cancer cell proliferation and malignant tumors
in animals exposed to electromagnetic radiation. (Slddmore and Baum, Szmigielski,
Chou, and Cleary all confirmed that finding.)
Hundreds of other studies on the negative effects of EMF to immune system, enzyme
synthesis, nervous system, learning, mood and behavioral pattern have proved to
be consistent and statistically significant. Electromagnetic radiation adversely
affects organic life at the molecular, cellular, biochemical and physiological levels
According to a study from the Neurological Hospital of the University of Freiburg
in Germany, cellular telephones' high-frequency electromagnetic fields lead to a
significant increase in blood pressure. Pulsed high-frequency fields, as used with
cellular telephones, affect biological processes in the brain, which are measurable
in electroencephalograms (EEG). It is beyond question that cellular
telephones negatively influence the brain's bioelectric activity.
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