The effect of non ionising electromagnetic radiation on RAAF personnel during World War II.
Abstract
Did exposure to non ionising electromagnetic radiation during World War II in the short term have a stimulating effect on the anterior pituitary gland, and in turn on the gonads of both sexes, since the figures obtained appeared to affect the sexes equally? Is it that the long-term effect of microwave radiation on personnel is to cause adenoma and carcinoma? Is this long-term effect similar to the long-term effect of X-rays on infants, children and adolescents? According to Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine 1980 (page 1710): "X-rays to the head and neck in infancy, childhood or adolescence is associated with a high incidence of thyroid disease later in life. Nodular disease is found to be particularly common on 20% of patients at risk, and may not be apparent until 30 years or more after exposure. One-third of the nodular type are found to be carcinomatous." The effect of non ionising electromagnetic and microwave radiation on those who work in these fields certainly needs much more investigation. What will be the long-term effect of using micro-ovens on the rising generation?
AI evidence extraction
Main findings
The abstract poses hypotheses/questions about whether short-term non-ionising electromagnetic radiation exposure could stimulate the anterior pituitary and gonads, and whether long-term microwave exposure could cause adenoma and carcinoma. It states that more investigation is needed and does not report specific study results.
Outcomes measured
- anterior pituitary stimulation
- gonadal effects
- adenoma
- carcinoma
- thyroid disease (by analogy to X-rays)
Limitations
- Appears to be speculative/commentary framed as questions rather than reporting empirical results
- No exposure metrics (frequency, intensity, duration) provided
- No methods, sample size, or quantitative outcome data reported
Suggested hubs
-
occupational-exposure
(0.9) Discusses exposure among personnel working with non-ionising electromagnetic/microwave radiation (RAAF personnel).
View raw extracted JSON
{
"study_type": "other",
"exposure": {
"band": null,
"source": "occupational",
"frequency_mhz": null,
"sar_wkg": null,
"duration": "short term and long term (not quantified)"
},
"population": "RAAF personnel during World War II",
"sample_size": null,
"outcomes": [
"anterior pituitary stimulation",
"gonadal effects",
"adenoma",
"carcinoma",
"thyroid disease (by analogy to X-rays)"
],
"main_findings": "The abstract poses hypotheses/questions about whether short-term non-ionising electromagnetic radiation exposure could stimulate the anterior pituitary and gonads, and whether long-term microwave exposure could cause adenoma and carcinoma. It states that more investigation is needed and does not report specific study results.",
"effect_direction": "unclear",
"limitations": [
"Appears to be speculative/commentary framed as questions rather than reporting empirical results",
"No exposure metrics (frequency, intensity, duration) provided",
"No methods, sample size, or quantitative outcome data reported"
],
"evidence_strength": "insufficient",
"confidence": 0.66000000000000003108624468950438313186168670654296875,
"peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
"keywords": [
"non-ionising electromagnetic radiation",
"microwave radiation",
"occupational exposure",
"RAAF",
"World War II",
"pituitary gland",
"gonads",
"adenoma",
"carcinoma"
],
"suggested_hubs": [
{
"slug": "occupational-exposure",
"weight": 0.90000000000000002220446049250313080847263336181640625,
"reason": "Discusses exposure among personnel working with non-ionising electromagnetic/microwave radiation (RAAF personnel)."
}
]
}
AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.
Comments
Log in to comment.
No comments yet.