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You are here : 3-RX.com > Home > Cancer -

Prolonged mobile phone use raises brain tumour risk

CancerApr 02, 06

The use of mobile phones over a long period of time can raise the risk of brain tumours, according to a Swedish study released on Friday, contradicting the conclusions of other researchers.

Last year, the Dutch Health Council, in an overview of research from around the world, found no evidence that radiation from mobile phones or TV towers was harmful. A four-year British survey in January also showed no link between regular, long-term use of cell phones and the most common type of tumour.

But researchers at the Swedish National Institute for Working Life looked at the mobile phone use of 2,200 cancer patients and an equal number of healthy control subjects.

Of the cancer patients, who were between 20 and 80 years old, 905 had a malignant brain tumour and about 10 percent of them were also heavy users of mobile phones.

“Of these 905 cases, 85 were so-called high users of mobile phones, that is they began early to use mobile and/or wireless telephones and used them a lot,” said the authors of the study in a statement issued by the Institute.

Published in the International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, the study defines heavy use as more than 2,000 hours, which “corresponds to 10 years’ use in the work place for one hour per day.”

Early use was defined as having begun to use a mobile phone before the age of 20.

There was also a marked increase in the risk of tumour on the side of the head where the telephone was generally used, said the study, which took into account factors such as smoking habits, working history and exposure to other agents.

Kjell Mild, who led the study, said the figures mean that heavy users of mobile phones have a 240-percent increased risk of a malignant tumour on the side of the head the phone is used.

“The way to get the risk down is to use handsfree,” he told Reuters. He said his study is the biggest yet to look at long-term users of the wireless phone, which has been around in Sweden in a portable form since 1984, longer than in many other countries.



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