Saturday, December 29, 2012

NMR imaging of cell phone radiation absorption in brain tissue

NMR imaging of cell phone radiation absorption in brain tissue
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/12/10/1205598109

David H. Gultekina,b,1 and Lothar Moellerc,1
Edited* by William Happer, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, and approved October 26, 2012 (received for review April 5, 2012)
Abstract
A method is described for measuring absorbed electromagnetic energy radiated from cell phone antennae into ex vivo brain tissue. NMR images the 3D thermal dynamics inside ex vivo bovine brain tissue and equivalent gel under exposure to power and irradiation time-varying radio frequency (RF) fields. The absorbed RF energy in brain tissue converts into Joule heat and affects the nuclear magnetic shielding and the Larmor precession. The resultant temperature increase is measured by the resonance frequency shift of hydrogen protons in brain tissue. This proposed application of NMR thermometry offers sufficient spatial and temporal resolution to characterize the hot spots from absorbed cell phone radiation in aqueous media and biological tissues. Specific absorption rate measurements averaged over 1 mg and 10 s in the brain tissue cover the total absorption volume. Reference measurements with fiber optic temperature sensors confirm the accuracy of the NMR thermometry.

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