## Abstract Recently, it has been reported that exposure to highβstrength electric fields can influence electrocardiogram (ECG) patterns, heart rates, and blood pressures in various species of animals. Our studies were designed to evaluate these reported effects and to help clarify some of the disa
Comparison of the coupling of grounded humans, swine and rats to vertical, 60-Hz electric fields
β Scribed by W. T. Kaune; R. D. Phillips
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 760 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Published and new data for grounded humans, swine, and rats exposed to vertical, 60βHz electric fields are used to determine field strengths at the surfaces of the bodies and average components of inducedβcurrent density along the axes of the bodies. At the tops of the bodies, surface electric fields are increased (enhanced) over the unperturbed field strength present before the subjects entered the field by factors of 17,7, and 4 for humans, swine, and rats, respectively. For an unperturbed field strength of 10 kV/m, average induced axial current densities in the neck, chest, abdomen, and feet are: 550, 190, 250, and 2000 nA/cm^2^, respectively, for humans; 40, 13, 20, and 1100 nA/cm^2^, respectively, for swine; and 28, 16, 2, and 1400 nA/cm^2^, respectively, for rats. These data are used to show that the actual electric fields experienced by animals depend strongly on the shape of the body and its orientation relative to the electric field and ground plane. This fact must be taken into account if biological data obtained with laboratory animals are to be used for the assessment of possible hazards to humans exposed to 60βHz electric fields.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Evaluations of reproductive and developmental toxicology, including teratology, were included as part of a broad screening study in Hanford Miniature swine (HMS) to detect effects of exposure to electric fields. One group (E) was exposed to a uniform, vertical, 60-Hz, 30-kVlm electric field for 20 h
Extremely low frequency magnetic fields interact with an animal by inducing internal electric fields, which are in addition to the normal endogenous fields present in living animals. Male rats weighing about 560 g each were anesthetized with ketamine and xylazine. Small incisions were made in the ve
Recent laboratory and epidemiological results have stimulated interest in the hypothesis that human beings may exhibit biological responses to magnetic and/or electric field transients with frequencies in the range between 100 Hz and 100 kHz. Much can be learned about the response of a system to a t
Rats were exposed to two procedures which enabled them to press a lever to turn off a 90 or 100 kV/m 60-Hz electric field or, later in the study, illumination from an incandescent lamp. Under one procedure, a response turned off the stimulus for a fixed duration, after which the stimulus was turned