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Estimation of head tissue-specific exposure from mobile phones based on measurements in the homogeneous SAM head

✍ Scribed by Marie-Christine Gosselin; Sven Kühn; Pedro Crespo-Valero; Emilio Cherubini; Marcel Zefferer; Andreas Christ; Niels Kuster


Book ID
102757668
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
593 KB
Volume
32
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-8462

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The maximum spatial peak exposure of each commercial mobile phone determined in compliance with the relevant safety and product standards is publicly available. However, this information is not sufficient for epidemiological studies aiming to correlate the use of mobile phones with specific cancers or to behavioral alterations, as the dominant location of the exposure may be anywhere in the head between the chin to above the ear, depending on the phone design. The objective of this study was to develop a methodology to determine tissue‐specific exposure by expanding the post‐processing of the measured surface or volume scans using standardized compliance testing equipment, that is, specific absorption rate (SAR) scanners. The transformation matrix was developed using the results from generic dipoles to evaluate the relation between the SAR in many brain regions of the Virtual Family anatomical phantoms and in virtual brain regions mapped onto the homogeneous SAM head. A set of transformation factors was derived to correlate the SAR induced in the SAM head to the SAR in the anatomical heads. The evaluation included the uncertainty associated with each factor, arising from the anatomical differences between the phantoms (typically less than 6 dB (4×)). The applicability of these factors was validated by performing simulations of four head models exposed to four realistic mobile phone models. The new methodology enables the reliable determination of the maximum and averaged exposure of specific tissues and functional brain regions to mobile phones when combined with mobile phone power control data, and therefore greatly strengthens epidemiological evaluations and improves information for the consumer. Bioelectromagnetics 32:493–505, 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.