Articles
Cell Phones and Brain Tumors
Scientists have found the first evidence linking brain cancer
with mobile phone use.
It was found that users who spend more than an hour a day
talking on a mobile phone have a close to one-third higher
risk of developing a rare form of brain tumor. Most
frequently, the cancers were found on the side of the head
that the user held the phone up to.
The association was found with digital mobile phones, oldstyle
analogue mobile phones and digital enhanced cordless
phones.
Although radiation from mobile phones has been shown th
alter the brain and affect memory, past studies have found
no evidence of a link between brain cancer and mobile
phone use.
In the current study, researchers looked at the medical
records of 1,600 patients with tumors who had used mobile
phones for up to 10 years before diagnosis. They found the
more mobile phones were used, and the more years they
were used, the higher the risk of brain tumor.
Further, spending more than an hour on a mobile phone per
day increased the risk of acoustic neuroma, a type of tumor,
by some 30 percent. This type of tumor, usually curable by
surgery, can occur in a nerve in the brain and lead to
deafness in one ear.
Incidences of this type of cancer, though rare, have
increases from one tumor per 100,000 people in 1980 to
one per 80,000 today.
International journal of Oncology
February 2003;22(2):399-407.