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Effects of microwave radiation on living tissues.

PAPER pubmed The Journal of trauma 1987 Animal study Effect: harm Evidence: Low

Abstract

Prompted by an alleged case of child abuse resulting from microwave oven burns and the discovery of one other case, an animal model was chosen to explore microwave burn characteristics upon living, perfusing tissue. Anesthetized piglets were exposed to radiation from a standard household microwave oven for varying lengths of time, sufficient to result in full-thickness skin and visceral burns. Characteristic burn patterns were grossly identified. Biopsies studied with both light and electron microscopy demonstrated a pattern of relative layered tissue sparing. Layered tissue sparing is characterized by burned skin and muscle, with relatively unburned subcutaneous fat between these two layers. These findings have important forensic and patient care implications.

AI evidence extraction

At a glance
Study type
Animal study
Effect direction
harm
Population
Anesthetized piglets
Sample size
Exposure
microwave microwave oven · varying lengths of time
Evidence strength
Low
Confidence: 74% · Peer-reviewed: yes

Main findings

Piglets exposed to radiation from a standard household microwave oven for varying durations developed full-thickness skin and visceral burns. Microscopy showed a pattern of relative layered tissue sparing, with burned skin and muscle and relatively unburned subcutaneous fat between these layers.

Outcomes measured

  • Full-thickness skin burns
  • Visceral burns
  • Gross burn pattern characteristics
  • Histologic/electron microscopy findings (layered tissue sparing)

Limitations

  • Sample size not reported in abstract
  • Exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, power, SAR, distance) not reported in abstract
  • Animal model; generalizability to humans not established in abstract
View raw extracted JSON
{
    "study_type": "animal",
    "exposure": {
        "band": "microwave",
        "source": "microwave oven",
        "frequency_mhz": null,
        "sar_wkg": null,
        "duration": "varying lengths of time"
    },
    "population": "Anesthetized piglets",
    "sample_size": null,
    "outcomes": [
        "Full-thickness skin burns",
        "Visceral burns",
        "Gross burn pattern characteristics",
        "Histologic/electron microscopy findings (layered tissue sparing)"
    ],
    "main_findings": "Piglets exposed to radiation from a standard household microwave oven for varying durations developed full-thickness skin and visceral burns. Microscopy showed a pattern of relative layered tissue sparing, with burned skin and muscle and relatively unburned subcutaneous fat between these layers.",
    "effect_direction": "harm",
    "limitations": [
        "Sample size not reported in abstract",
        "Exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, power, SAR, distance) not reported in abstract",
        "Animal model; generalizability to humans not established in abstract"
    ],
    "evidence_strength": "low",
    "confidence": 0.7399999999999999911182158029987476766109466552734375,
    "peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
    "keywords": [
        "microwave radiation",
        "microwave oven",
        "burns",
        "piglets",
        "animal model",
        "forensic",
        "layered tissue sparing",
        "histology",
        "electron microscopy"
    ],
    "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.

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