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Joseph Roberts
Dr.
George Carlo is a leading authority on the dangers of radio frequency
radiation and a world recognized medical scientist, author and lawyer.
His career spans 30 years and more than 150 medical, scientific
and public policy publications in the areas of public health, workplace
safety and consumer protection. George Carlo speaks in Vancouver
on May 2, 7pm, St. Andrews-Wesley Church, 1022 Nelson Street @ Burrard.
Common Ground: Your experience
with radio wave health risks goes back a long time. How did you
first become involved?
Dr. Carlo: This goes back to
1993 in the US when questions were raised about mobile phones being
a possible cause of brain cancer. The US Congress held open hearings
and it became clear that cell phones had been exempted from premarket
testing. Normally, a consumer device that emits radiation, such
as a mobile phone or cell phone, would go through a process of pre-marketing
testing that would include a series of in vitro and in
vivo studies to evaluate predictions of risk to the population
that would use them. Cell phones, however, were exempted from that
testing based on pressure from the mobile phone industry in 1984.
That input was based on science that was present in the public domain
at the time that indicated that the only health effect that could
follow from microwave exposure had to do with the heating of biological
tissue. And because cell phones operated at very, very low power,
they would not be able to heat tissue. They were, therefore, excluded
from the onerous process of pre-market testing. That exemption was
known as the "low power exclusion, and in retrospect, that one
political mistake has put millions of people at risk of serious
disease.
Following the public hearing, Congress
took serious issue with both the Food and Drug Administration, which
was the agency of record responsible for these radiation emitting
devices, as well as with the mobile phone industry itself. Congress
put both on the spot and the mobile phone industry agreed to put
up what became $28.5 million dollars in research funding as long
as the FDA did not ban mobile phones at the time. I was the person
given the responsibility of overseeing and conducting that research.
Between 1993 and 1999, with more than 200 doctors and scientists
from around the world participating, and the Harvard School of Public
Health reviewing more than 56 studies, we ran what still remains
the largest program ever conducted in the world on the dangers of
mobile telephony and wireless communications in general.
CG: When you went public with
your findings in 1999, it created great controversy. Your findings
about cell phones increasing brain cancer are still dismissed by
the industry and government regulatory agencies. How is this possible?
Dr. Carlo: This is not based
on mere differences of opinion. Our findings in 1999 were the first
to indicate increases in brain cancer among cell phone users and
other studies have since corroborated those findings. In the peer-reviewed
published literature today, more than 300 statistically significant
findings show excess risk of brain cancer and other tumours among
people who use mobile phones. We have mechanistic studies that show
how the cancer increase happens following exposure. That government
agencies and the industry can deny the existence of those findings
is astonishing.
CG: Standards adopted by the
World Health Organization, our own Health Protection Agency and
the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
suggest there is no problem with current levels of exposure from
cell phones and base stations. What are your views on those limits
set in relation to the sort of work you have been doing?
Dr. Carlo: Those standards are
irrelevant. Remember, this is high technology and every six months
the technology changes. It evolves so rapidly that the old days
are three or four years ago. The ICNIRP guidelines came into being
in 1998, and are based on information that was developed many years
prior to that. In this particular area, that is ancient history.
The ICNIRP guidelines are also based on thermal mechanism data based
on heating. The heating mechanism, with regard to information-carrying
radio waves, is mostly irrelevant to the situation we have today.
Our view is that this has now become
a medical problem we are beyond the time where discussing the
science regarding "is there a problem" has public health value.
We have patients in many countries who have these very obvious membrane
sensitivity symptoms. Membrane sensitivity syndrome has been around
for about 25 years. Originally, this type of condition was the result
of a high level of exposure to chemicals; we used to call it chemical
sensitivity. Now we have identified the same type of condition in
patients who are exposed to various types of electromagnetic radiation.
It is a medical problem because we have people who are sick and
need medical attention.
People with membrane sensitivity syndrome
can be in a room where somebody turns on a cell phone and they will
end up having an immediate adverse and traumatic reaction. They
develop internal bleeding and they will have blood in their stool.
The condition is very debilitating. It prevents people from being
able to work. They cannot earn a living; they have difficult relationships
with their children and their spouses give up on them. Families
are shattered. It is a very serious medical condition with wide
ranging ramifications.
CG: Medically, how does this
happen?
Dr. Carlo: The pathological
mechanisms are the key to both understanding the problem and prescribing
preventive and therapeutic inteventions to solve the problem. All
electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum is not
created equal. We have done work that identifies at least four different
effect windows with different mechanisms of harm that are very unique.
One effect window is what you have from the extremely low-frequency
electromagnetic field, the power line frequency, if you will. What
happens at that part of the electromagnetic spectrum is that the
magnetic field is dominant. In an electromagnetic field, there is
always a magnetic field and an electric field travelling perpendicularly.
The magnetic field produces an electric field and the electric field
produces a magnetic field and the magnetic field produces an electric
field. That is why it radiates because it is a self-propagating
system. But at the low end of the electromagnetic spectrum, the
magnetic field is predominant.
When you have an ELF (Extremely Low
Frequency) field that is pushed by high power, you have a direct
magnetic impact on the local physiology of cells and tissues. We
know that that mechanism involves disrupting what we call gap-junction
communication between cells. I do not need to go into all of that,
but the fact is that we understand how it works. It is a direct
magnetic effect and because magnetic fields have existed in nature
since the beginning, we, as human beings, have developed compensatory
mechanisms so that there is a threshold. There is a degree of magnetic
field that we can sustain without being adversely affected. So unless
you have a very high amount of power pushing that magnetic field,
as you would have underneath a power line, for example, you do not
cross the threshold for this direct magnetic effect. That is the
ELF window.
At the other end of the spectrum, we
have the ionising radiation window and at the high end of the spectrum,
with ionising radiation, the electric field is so predominant that
you have extremely high energy. Those electromagnetic waves up in
the ionising range and they come from sunlight and lightning
and a bunch of other natural sources as well break apart chemical
bonds. Because that damage is so determinative or severe, we believe
that, at least in terms of clinical manifestations, there is also
a threshold. That means there is a safe level. In between, you have
the radio frequency radiation window; that is the third window.
What we have learned is this: a raw microwave signal, 1,900 megahertz,
in other words, is oscillating at 1,900 million cycles per second.
To put that in context with your heart, your heart beats at two
hertz, two cycles per second. So a raw microwave is beating at 1,900
million cycles per second. That is too fast for your body to pick
up; your body simply does not recognize it. The only time your body
recognizes it is if you put 100 watts of power behind that signal
and then you can heat tissue and meat like you would in a microwave
oven. So when you put high power behind a microwave, you cause heating.
That is the thermal window that the current government standards
address.
Now, because the raw microwave is invisible
to biological tissue unless pushed by high power, it is not a problem.
However, with wireless communication, we must carry information
and we have to be able to have that information deciphered at the
other end of a phone call so that when we talk on the phone we want
somebody to hear us talking. In order for that to happen, the information
has to be packeted and it is bundled in packets based on amplitude
modulation. Another factor is that for the phone companies to make
money, they must have multiple people talking on one frequency band
at the same time. So for that to happen, you have breaks in the
modulation to make room for new calls. That is either going to be
code domain breaks or time domain breaks, so that what you have
is a circumstance where a packet of data moves and then it stops
and then it moves and then it stops because of this multiple access.
When that happens, it forms a secondary wave.
The best analogy we have been able
to come up with for a secondary wave is the old clothesline, which
would be on a pulley. An empty clothesline is like the raw microwave
signal the 1,900 megahertz carrier signal, for example. Putting
clothes on the clothesline is the equivalent of these data packets
and when you move the clothes through space on the clothesline,
they wave back and forth: the secondary wave. That wave is what
we call the information-carrying radio wave. The wave that is formed
by the packeting of information oscillates in the hertz range and
in the hertz range, the body can recognize it. Here is what happens:
at the level of the cell membrane whether it is a brain cell,
a blood cell, a nerve cell, a liver cell, a bone cell or a skin
cell there are protein receptors on the cell membrane and their
job is to keep track of what is going on in the environment around
the cell. You have chemical receptors and you have vibrational receptors.
The vibrational receptors are able to pick up radio signals that
oscillate in the hertz to kilohertz range.
As the information-carrying radio wave
comes in the vicinity of the cell, the vibrational protein recognizes
it within milliseconds. But because in the beginning there were
no information-carrying radio waves they are not natural; they
are completely manmade the body interprets the information-carrying
radio wave as a foreign invader. When that interpretation happens,
a message goes inside the cell that says: "We are under seige;
we need to protect ourselves." First, the active transport channels,
which are the avenues where nutrients pass into the cell and waste
products pass out, begin to close down. As the active transport
channels begin to close down, you have a circumstance where nutrients
that are in the river between the cells are not able to get into
the cell. When nutrients cannot get into the cell, the cell becomes
nutrient and energy deficient. When the cell becomes energy deficient,
it is not able to communicate with surrounding cells, so that you
have a disruption in what we call intercellular communication.
If you think about it, when cells are
working together talking to each other and working together
you have a tissue. When tissues are talking together and working
together, you have an organ. When organs are talking together and
working together, you have an organism, like a human. So when you
disrupt intercellular communication, you are disrupting a fundamental
physiological process. What happens is that intercellular communication
is disrupted. Messages between cells cannot be sent because the
cell does not have enough energy to do that. At the same time, because
these active transport channels have closed down, waste product
builds up inside the cell. When waste product builds up inside the
cell, you have a very high concentration of highly reactive molecules
called free radicals. Free radicals, like the free radicals in the
1960s, love a party. Inside the cell, the party is going on at the
mitochondria, which is where all of the respiratory functioning
of the cell takes place. The free radicals, preferentially, will
go to the mitochondria and disrupt the functioning of the mitochondria.
In disrupting the functioning of the mitochondria, you create cellular
dysfunction, meaning that the cell is not able to do its job properly.
That is why, for example, if you have a cell whose job is keeping
the blood-brain barrier closed and that cell is now dysfunctional,
the blood-brain barrier opens. Indeed, we and others have seen leakage
in the blood-brain barrier as an effect.
Additionally, the free radicals interfere
with DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) repair inside the cell. We know
this now because several studies from around the world have shown
the formation of micronuclei following exposure to these information-carrying
radio waves. A micronucleus is a piece of DNA that functions well
enough to form a membrane around itself, but it has no other purpose.
As long as it stays inside the cell it is okay, but when the cell
is disrupted at the mitochondria level, it goes through a process
that we call apoptosis, or programmed cell death. The cell actually
commits suicide to make room for another cell to come in. This happens
on a regular basis. Every six months or so, you turn over all of
your cells because of apoptosis. When apoptosis happens, the cell
membrane disintegrates and whatever is inside the cell goes into
the space between the cells and the micronuclei go into the space
in between the cells.
Under normal circumstances, a message
would be sent to the immune system saying, "We have micronucleus
here. Send some macrophages so we can get rid of it." The problem
is the intercellular communication has been disrupted and the message
to the immune system does not get there. So now you have a micronucleus
that is a piece of wild DNA sitting in a nutrient-rich environment
and it is free to clone and proliferate. That is the mechanism for
the development of a tumour. If you look at the biological cellular
mechanism, we have a basis now to explain the diversity of symptoms
that we see in the people in our registry. We published a paper
late last year proposing a link between the increasing incidence
of autism around the world and exposure to information-carrying
radio waves (www.buergerwelle.de/pdf/emr_autism_acnem_final_1.pdf).
CG: So where do we go from here?
Dr. Carlo:Well there are a couple of things that are obvious. First,
over the past 15 years, the issue has evolved from a scientific
determination of whether or not there are health problems caused
by wireless technology to the realization that we have an emerging
medical crisis for people who are electro-hypersensitive. We have
a potential link to autism and other serious health effects. Many
of us believe that the threat posed by wireless technology is the
most serious we will face in our lifetime. The top priority for
us now is to address those medical concerns. Second, it is clear
that government agencies will not be able to mobilize themselves
fast enough to help. The inertia in those agencies prevents efficient
adaptation and the problem is further complicated by the enormous
political influence of the wireless industry compounding that inertia.
It is going to be up to individuals to take steps to protect themselves
and their families.
Dr. Carlo's career spans 30 years
and more than 150 publications in the areas of health, workplace
safety and consumer protection. His most recent book, Cell Phones:
Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age, co-written with Washington
columnist Martin Schram, is printed in five languages. Dr. Carlo
is presently Chair of the Science and Public Policy Institute based
in Washington, D.C. His current focus is the Safe Wireless Initiative
project (www.safewireless.org). George Carlo speaks in Vancouver
on May 2, 7-9 pm, St. Andrews-Wesley Church, 1022 Nelson St., $20/advance
at 604-435-0512, $25/door or register online at www.hans.org/events/?event=carlo2008
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