2026 Evidence Snapshot: Non‑Thermal RF Bioeffects Across 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz, and 28 GHz—Why Heat‑Only Safety Limits Don’t Track Biology
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 13 studies (2026) spanning 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz Wi‑Fi, 28 GHz mmWave, and real‑world base‑station proximity and smartphone use. Across mechanistic, animal, and observational evidence, multiple biologi…
2026 EMF Research Snapshot: Non‑Thermal Biological Effects Across 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz Wi‑Fi, and 28 GHz mmWave—Why Thermal‑Only Safety Limits Are Not Enough
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 12 studies (2026) linking RF/EMF exposures and wireless tech use to oxidative stress, apoptosis, reproductive harm, kidney changes, sleep disruption, and base-station symptom patterns—supporting precautio…
2026 Evidence Snapshot: Non‑Thermal RF/Sub‑THz Biological Effects Are Being Reported—Thermal‑Only Safety Standards Still Don’t Address Them
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of three 2026 studies reporting biological effects from 6 GHz RF and 0.1 THz exposure and field EMR associations in plants. Even with low-evidence limitations, the findings underscore that thermal-only RF sa…
Effect of high-frequency radiofrequency (6 GHz) electromagnetic radiation on oxidative stress and kidney morphology
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Feb 17, 2026
This animal experiment exposed rats to 6 GHz RF-EMR from a signal generator for 4 hours/day over 6 weeks and assessed plasma oxidative stress markers and kidney histology. The RF-EMR group showed lower plasma GSH, CAT, SOD, and MDA levels than control and sham groups, while cortisol did not differ. The authors also…
Genotoxic and histopathological effects of 6 GHz radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation on rat liver tissue
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2025
This animal experiment exposed adult male rats to 6 GHz RF-EMR (0.065 W/kg) for 4 hours/day over 42 days and compared them with sham controls. The exposed group showed higher comet assay genotoxicity metrics, though not statistically significant, and more prominent liver histopathological changes (e.g., portal…