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A new study in the Institute of
Physics journal Physics in Medicine and Biology, has
reported that the new generation of digital mobile
phones can interfere with many types of heart pacemaker.
The pacemakers can confuse the signals generated by
mobile phones for the heart's own electrical signals,
causing the pacemaker to malfunction. The authors of the
paper, based in the US and Italy, say that newer
pacemakers fitted with a ceramic filter are immune and
recommend that all manufacturers use these filters.
Electromagnetic interference between mobile phones
and cardiac pacemakers has caused concern among
physicians since 1994, when it was reported that mobile
phones could cause the life-saving implants to
malfunction. Early studies found various pacemakers
susceptible to interference and the researchers
suggested wearers should keep a safe distance from
mobile phones. The studies did not look at the cause of
the interference, however, so it was not known which
pacemaker wearers were most at risk.
Biomedical engineer Giovanni Calcagnini of the
Italian Institute of Health in Rome explains that some
electrical components of the pacemakers act like an
aerial. They can pick up undesirable radio frequency
signals and transmit them to the pacemaker's sensitive
electronic circuits. He and his colleagues at the Center
for Devices and Radiological Health of the Food and Drug
Administration, in Rockville, Maryland, USA, have
investigated exactly how radio frequency signals of the
kind used by modern mobile phones are transmitted to the
pacemaker's internal components.
The researchers tested three versions of the same
pacemaker model. The first was equipped with a
conventional filter, used to block high-frequency radio
signals. The second used the newer ceramic filters
connected directly to the internal circuits. The third
pacemaker was fitted with both devices.
For each pacemaker, the researchers monitored the
pacemaker's output signal, which usually helps control
the patient's heart beat, while exposing the device to
the radio signals from mobile phones, including the GSM
phones used throughout Europe.
They report in Physics in Medicine and Biology that
the radio frequency signals from GSM phones passed
straight through the standard filter device. "This
phenomenon could pose a critical problem for people
wearing pacemakers because digital mobile phones use
extremely low-frequency signals, which can be mistaken
for normal heartbeat," explains Calcagnini. "If a
pacemaker detects a normal heartbeat it will not
function properly and could be very dangerous for the
wearer." The pacemaker equipped with the ceramic filter,
however, was immune to mobile phone radio frequency
signals.
"Most manufacturers have started to equip their new
models with ceramic filters," explains Giovanni
Calcagnini. "We recommend all new models be equipped
with these filters, since it is difficult to change
cellphone technology to avoid them producing
low-frequency radio frequency signals." |