Common concern about the biological
effects of electromagnetic fields (EMF) is increasing
with the expansion of X-band microwaves (MW). The
purpose of our work was to determine whether exposure
to MW pulses in this range can induce toxic effects on
human astrocytoma cells. Cultured astrocytoma cells
(Clonetics line 1321N1) were submitted to 9.6 GHz
carrier, 90% amplitude modulated by extremely low
frequency (ELF)-EMF pulses inside a Gigahertz
Transversal Electromagnetic Mode cell (GTEM-cell).
Astrocytoma cultures were maintained inside a GTEMincubator
in standard culture conditions at 37±0.1°C,
5% CO2, in a humidified atmosphere. Two experimental
conditions were applied with field parameters
respectively of: PW 100-120 ns; PRF 100-800 Hz; PRI
10-1.25 ms; power 0.34-0.60 mW; electric field strength
1.25-1.64 V/m; magnetic field peak amplitude 41.4-54.6
μ Oe. SAR was calculated to be 4.0x10-4 W/Kg.
Astrocytoma samples were grown in a standard
incubator. Reaching 70-80% confluence, cells were
transferred to a GTEM-incubator. Experimental
procedure included exposed human astrocytoma cells to
MW for 15, 30, 60 min and 24 h and unexposed shamcontrol
samples. Double blind method was applied. Our
results showed that cytoskeleton proteins, cell
morphology and viability were not modified.
Statistically significant results showed increased cell
proliferation rate under 24h MW exposure. Hsp-70 and Bcl-2 antiapoptotic proteins were observed in control
and treated samples, while an increased expression of
connexin 43 proteins was found in exposed samples. The
implication of these results on increased proliferation is
the subject of our current research