In Men Chronically Exposed To Magnetic
Fields, No Disruptions Of Melatonin Exists
A new study offers direction
for those examining the illnesses of those working or living near large
electrical facilities.
July 13, 2003 - Bethesda, MD –Exposure to light has been proven to
inhibit the normal secretion of melatonin from the light-sensitive pineal
gland. But light is only one part of the electromagnetic spectrum,
occupying a wavelength between 730 and 400 nm. Because light is
the only visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, other
wavelengths may also inhibit melatonin secretion,
including the omnipresent magnetic fields generated by the
production, transport, and distribution of electricity (50 Hz in
Europe, 60 Hz in North America). These fields are encountered in most
activities of daily life, from lighting to heating and other
routine household applications of electricity.
Past experimental studies of rats exposed to electric or magnetic fields
have found a diminution in melatonin secretion. The importance of the length
of magnetic field exposure in this inhibitory effect suggests
that the effect of these fields on pineal function may be
cumulative, at least in rats. In fact, much of the evidence for
the melatonin hypothesis is based on data for rodents. But humans
and rodents differ with respect to melatonin secretion in two
important ways: (1) rodents are nocturnally active, and they
show differences in the anatomical location of the pineal gland;
and (2) the geometry of the skull may cause stronger eddy
currents in field-exposed animals.
Results about the effects of magnetic fields in higher mammals – lambs,
monkeys and humans -- have heretofore been either negative or
provide controversial results. Most work published thus far has
involved the acute exposure of healthy volunteers to magnetic
fields and has not found it to affect melatonin secretion.
Nevertheless, it is possible that chronic human exposure
to magnetic fields might affect melatonin secretion, its circadian
rhythm, or both. Because of the obvious technical difficulties in
exposing healthy volunteers to magnetic fields for a long period,
at a high intensity, or both, the only feasible experimental
approach toward the study of such chronic exposure involves the
study of subjects exposed continually either on the job or at
home -- occupationally or residentially.
A New Study
The possible effects of magnetic fields on human melatonin secretion is
important from a public health perspective, because alterations
in the secretion of this hormone (for example, phase shifting or
reduced amplitude) are likely to lead to clinical disorders
involving fatigue, sleep and mood disturbances, altered
performance, and depression, all signs that can be related to
desynchronization of circadian rhythms. Now, an innovative study addresses
this issue. The methodology entails the examination of workers exposed
to magnetic fields daily for 1 one to 20 years, both in the workplace
and at home.
The authors of “Magnetic Fields and The Melatonin Hypothesis: A Study of
Workers Chronically Exposed to 50-Hz Magnetic Fields” are
Yvan Touitou, Françoise Camus, and
Henriette Charbuy, from the Department of Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine Pitié-Salpętričre, and
Jacques Lambrozo, Service
des Etudes Médicales, Electricité de France/Gaz de France, all in Paris,
France. Their findings appear in the June 2003 edition of the American
Journal of Physiology – Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology.
Methodology
Thirty male volunteers (15 exposed and 15 controls) participated in the
autumn study, when the light-dark cycle was 10 hours light-14
hours dark. All subjects had similar schedules, with daytime
activity from 0700 to 2300 and nocturnal rest, and were similar in age and
in physical activity. Subjects were required to have no acute or chronic
diseases, have regular sleep habits, do no night work, have taken
no trans-meridian airplane flights during the preceding
two months, and take no drugs. All were nonsmokers who used
alcohol and coffee in moderate quantities. The exposed workers
had not been on call in the 48 hours preceding the experiment.
They were asked not to use electric razors or hair dryers during
the study or in the 24 hours before the blood samples were
taken. Women were not included in this study because the interaction
of their ovarian hormone cycle with melatonin secretion might
have made the study results difficult to interpret.
The 15 test subjects all worked in extra high voltage (EHV) substations
in the Paris metropolitan region, operating and maintaining the
EHV electricity transmission network (225 and 400 KV). Their work
essentially involved installing couplings between EHV lines as
well as voltage transformers. The exposed subjects were also housed near the
substations, which means that they were exposed to magnetic fields both
while working and during their daily life in their lodgings. Ten
of the 15 subjects were exposed from seven to 20 years, and
five subjects were exposed from one to four years. The 15
control subjects did not work in a technical job that could have
resulted in occupational exposure to magnetic fields. They were
subjected only to the normal electromagnetic fields of our daily
environment.
Dosimeters measured the exposure continuously for seven days, during the
daytime and at night. Measurements were taken and recorded every
30 seconds all day long. Both exposed and control subjects wore the
magnetic field recording device throughout the workday. At home,
they placed it in a "public" room. The weekly geometric mean of
individual exposures ranged from 0.1 to 2.6 µT. The results are
compared with those for 15 unexposed men who served as controls.
Blood samples were taken hourly from 2000 to 0800. Nighttime
urine was also collected and analyzed.
Results
The weekly geometric mean of individual exposures ranged from 0.1 to
2.6 µT. The arithmetic mean of the 15 exposure values was
0.72 µT. The arithmetic mean of daytime (workday) exposure of the
15 exposed subjects was 0.64 µT and nighttime (residential)
exposure 0.82 µT. A subset of three subjects had a substantially higher
exposure with an arithmetic mean of 2.10 µT. Their arithmetic mean workday
exposure was 1.50 µT and nighttime residential exposure 2.71 µT. For
the control subjects the weekly geometric mean of individual exposures
ranged from 0.004 to 0.092 µT. The arithmetic mean of the 15 exposure values
was 0.04 µT. The arithmetic mean of both the workday and nighttime
exposure for the 15 controls was 0.04 µT.
A comparison between groups found that that melatonin secretion did not
differ for the exposed and control groups.
Conclusions
This study of workers exposed daily to magnetic fields for a period of
one to 20 years in their workplace and at home shows that this
exposure does not lead to alterations in their melatonin
secretion. The clinical signs (depression, mood and sleep
disorders, malignant diseases, etc.) reported in some studies of
people living or working near electric lines or substations thus
do not appear to be associated with a disturbance in their
melatonin levels.
It is possible that the difference in the effects observed in
animals and humans is the result of both the anatomical
configuration of the pineal gland and the principally nocturnal
rhythm of rodent activity. A different sensitivity to magnetic
fields between species could also be part of the explanation, as
it is known that some species detect and perceive magnetic fields
differently. It is also possible that some subjects are more
sensitive to magnetic fields than others; this is very difficult
to demonstrate in a case-control study because of the enormous
interindividual variability of melatonin secretion and plasma
melatonin concentrations in humans.
To the researchers’ knowledge, this study is the first to examine both
plasma melatonin circadian rhythm and urinary 6-sulfatoxymelatonin
concentration in subjects who have been exposed chronically and
for a long period to magnetic fields at home and at work. Therefore, it is the first research to show that chronic magnetic field exposure appears to have no cumulative effect in humans on serum
melatonin secretion and circadian rhythm or urinary excretion of 6-sulfatoxymelatonin, at least among men in their
forties.
- end -
Source: June 2003 edition of the American Journal of Physiology –
Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
The American Physiological
Society (APS) was founded in 1887 to foster basic and applied science, much
of it relating to human health. The Bethesda, MD-based Society has more
than 10,000 members and publishes 3,800 articles in its 14 peer-reviewed
journals every year.
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Editor’s Note: A copy of the research article is available in pdf
format to the press.
Members of the press are invited to obtain a pdf copy of the study and
to interview members of the research team. To do so, please contact Donna
Krupa at 703.527.7357 (direct dial), 703.967.2751 (cell) or
djkrupa1@aol.com.