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Microwave influence on the isolated heart function: I. Effect of modulation

✍ Scribed by Andrei G. Pakhomov; Boris V. Dubovick; Igor G. Degtyariov; Anatoly N. Pronkevich


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
704 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-8462

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✦ Synopsis


Dependence of the microwave effect on modulation parameters (pulse width, duty ratio, and peak intensity) was studied in an isolated frog auricle preparation. The rate and amplitude of spontaneous auricle twitches were measured during and after a 2 min exposure to 915 or 885 MHz microwaves and were compared to preexposure values. The studied ranges of modulation parameters were: pulse width, 1 0-6-10-2 s; duty ratio, 7: 100000, and peak specific absorption rate, 100-3000 Wlkg. Combinations of the parameters were chosen by chance, and about 400 various exposure regimes were tested. The experiments established that no regime was effective unless the average microwave power was high enough to induce preparation heating (0.1-0.4 "C). The twitch rate instantly increased, and the amplitude decreased, as the temperature rose; similar changes could be induced by equivalent conventional heating. The data provide evidence that the effect of short-term microwave exposure on the isolated heart pacemaker and contractile functions depends on pulse modulation just as much as modulation determines the average absorbed power. These functions demonstrated no specific dependence on exposure parameters such as frequency or power windows. 01995 Wiley-Liss. Inc.


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