Share
𝕏 Facebook LinkedIn

Electromagnetic fields enhance chemically-induced hyperploidy in mammalian oocytes.

PAPER pubmed Mutagenesis 1997 Animal study Effect: mixed Evidence: Low

Abstract

Epidemiological studies suggest that exposure to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) in the environment may be associated with mutagenic changes, but the relation between EMF exposure and aneuploidy has not previously been studied. Environmental EMFs apparently lack the energy necessary to function as aneugens, but the possibility exists that EMFs could influence the incidence of aneuploidy synergistically because EMFs can activate the neuroendocrine system, and ovulation and oocyte meiotic maturation are under neurohormonal control. This hypothesis was tested by examining the effect of EMF exposure on the occurrence of hyperploidy in mouse oocytes induced by vinblastine sulphate (VBS), which was employed as a surrogate for aneugens in the environment. The incidence of hyperploidy in metaphase II oocytes of individual mice following superovulation was determined, and statistical methods were developed to assess whether EMF exposure during oogenesis in the presence of VBS altered the rate of hyperploidy. A significant effect of EMF exposure on VBS-induced hyperploidy was found (P < 0.05). The data suggested that the EMF primarily affected the mice that exhibited a high incidence of VBS-induced hyperploidy. Exposure had no effect on the number of oocytes ovulated nor on the occurrence of hypoploidy. The results support the hypothesis that EMF exposure can promote the occurrence of aneuploidy caused by an aneugen via a mechanism involving the neuroendocrine system.

AI evidence extraction

At a glance
Study type
Animal study
Effect direction
mixed
Population
Mice (mouse oocytes)
Sample size
Exposure
environmental (unspecified) · during oogenesis (timing stated; duration not specified)
Evidence strength
Low
Confidence: 74% · Peer-reviewed: yes

Main findings

In mice treated with vinblastine sulphate (VBS), EMF exposure during oogenesis significantly increased the incidence of VBS-induced hyperploidy (P < 0.05). EMF exposure had no effect on the number of oocytes ovulated and no effect on hypoploidy; the data suggested the effect was primarily in mice with a high baseline incidence of VBS-induced hyperploidy.

Outcomes measured

  • Hyperploidy in metaphase II oocytes
  • Hypoploidy in metaphase II oocytes
  • Number of oocytes ovulated

Limitations

  • EMF exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, intensity, duration) are not provided in the abstract.
  • Hyperploidy was chemically induced using vinblastine sulphate as a surrogate aneugen, rather than assessing EMF exposure alone.
  • Sample size and detailed experimental design elements are not reported in the abstract.
View raw extracted JSON
{
    "study_type": "animal",
    "exposure": {
        "band": null,
        "source": "environmental (unspecified)",
        "frequency_mhz": null,
        "sar_wkg": null,
        "duration": "during oogenesis (timing stated; duration not specified)"
    },
    "population": "Mice (mouse oocytes)",
    "sample_size": null,
    "outcomes": [
        "Hyperploidy in metaphase II oocytes",
        "Hypoploidy in metaphase II oocytes",
        "Number of oocytes ovulated"
    ],
    "main_findings": "In mice treated with vinblastine sulphate (VBS), EMF exposure during oogenesis significantly increased the incidence of VBS-induced hyperploidy (P < 0.05). EMF exposure had no effect on the number of oocytes ovulated and no effect on hypoploidy; the data suggested the effect was primarily in mice with a high baseline incidence of VBS-induced hyperploidy.",
    "effect_direction": "mixed",
    "limitations": [
        "EMF exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, intensity, duration) are not provided in the abstract.",
        "Hyperploidy was chemically induced using vinblastine sulphate as a surrogate aneugen, rather than assessing EMF exposure alone.",
        "Sample size and detailed experimental design elements are not reported in the abstract."
    ],
    "evidence_strength": "low",
    "confidence": 0.7399999999999999911182158029987476766109466552734375,
    "peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
    "keywords": [
        "electromagnetic fields",
        "EMF",
        "aneuploidy",
        "hyperploidy",
        "hypoploidy",
        "mouse",
        "oocytes",
        "oogenesis",
        "vinblastine sulphate",
        "VBS",
        "neuroendocrine"
    ],
    "suggested_hubs": []
}

AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.

AI-extracted fields are generated from the abstract/metadata and may be incomplete or incorrect. This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice.

Comments

Log in to comment.

No comments yet.