Archive
3 postsRestoring Bioelectric Timing Fidelity to Prevent Immune Dysregulation
RF Safe publishes a mechanistic white-paper-style post arguing that pulsed/low-frequency components of RF exposure could introduce “phase noise” into voltage-gated ion channel (VGIC) voltage sensors (S4), degrading the timing of membrane potentials and calcium (Ca²⁺) oscillations that immune cells use for activation and tolerance decisions. The post claims such timing disruption could mis-set immune thresholds, promote inflammation, and trigger mitochondrial ROS and mtDNA release that sustains a feed-forward inflammatory loop. It frames reported tumor patterns in animal bioassays (e.g., cardiac schwannomas, gliomas) as consistent with this proposed “timing-fidelity” mechanism, while acknowledging competing views on whether RF at current limits can couple to VGICs.
Transition Pathways Towards Electromagnetic Sustainability in the Built and Lived Environment
This paper discusses electromagnetic (EM) fields as an environmental health and sustainability issue in the built and lived environment, particularly with expanding ICT and energy systems. It reports conducting a literature review and EM field audits in three locations across two cities in Canada and the UK to examine exposure trends and review major safety guidelines. The authors propose transition pathways toward “electromagnetic sustainability,” emphasizing planning, exposure reduction, and risk governance.
The effect of Wi-Fi on elastic and collagen fibres in the blood vessel wall of the chorioallantoic membrane
This animal experimental study exposed chicken embryos (CAM) continuously to 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi at an average power density of 300 μW/m2 for 9 or 14 embryonic days. H&E staining reportedly showed no significant structural differences in large vessel walls versus controls. However, special staining reported decreased optical density of elastic fibers at both time points and changes in collagen fiber optical density (increase at day 9, decrease at day 14). The authors conclude Wi-Fi exposure can alter fibrous vessel wall components and suggest potential relevance to cardiovascular disorders.