Pragmatist
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 12, 2004
- Messages
- 1,529
cogreslab said:To Prag: Thank you for your continued efforts to make me see the light (small joke here). It seems the nub of the issue is that you argue that weak ELF electric fields cannot possibly penetrate the Faraday cage of the body, and have asked me to produce evidence of this. By contrast I am arguing that externally originating ELF electric fields (e.g. 50 or 60Hz, 20V/m) do have important adverse health effects. I take the point well that in vitro effects are not sufficient to make my argument stand up, because they do not occur within this Faraday cage, and that I need to produce in vivo results in order to try to convince you.
Arguably this means exposing an organism - let us start with a whole live animal, (though we recognise that any effects found may not also apply to humans) to the field strength of interest. We also have to beware of possible confounders, such as magnetic fields, chemicals, restraint stress, etc.
Well there are a vast number of such experiments. Probably the most obvious are those placing small animals under powerlines and examining their brains for anomalies, such as the series conducted by Hans Arne Hannsen in the early 1980s. I have mentioned those reviewed by Morris Kendall et al (1989). Before then were the studies by Suzanne Bawin and Ross Adey on live cat brains, though these were mainly (but not all) at RF frequencies which famously reported calcium efflux. (I am regarding that effect as adverse in view of the vital role of that cation in immunocompetence). Would you feel that this approach is going to be persuasive?
To be honest I don't think so, because as you point out, there are so many possible confounders and we could never rule them out. What is actually needed is some experimental method that will automatically bypass as many confounders as possible. Actually, I just had an interesting idea. Have you ever looked into data from people with electrical implants like pacemakers? The people who make pacemakers (or other powered implants) must have data on their external field strengths. You could then look to see if there was any correlation between use of such a device and any of your assumed effects.
In other tests, I think the first thing you need to establish is some reliable and REPRODUCIBLE effect of electric fields on organisms (in vitro will do). The point being that this will give you something realistic to test for. The problem with the effects reported by Adey etc., is that they are largely not reproducible.
What would be ideal is some kind of self contained E field logging device that you could encapsulate and swallow - I've heard there are logging devices of this type available. The idea would be to measure real internal field strengths for various exposures over a 24 hour period.