Dariusz leszczynski biography sample

  • Dr Dariusz Leszczynski, Adjunct Professor, Division of Biochemistry and Biotechnology at the University of Helsinki and a member of a working group of 31.
  • Two studies (1, 2) in which the authors examined the effects of mobile phone radiation on gene expression using the transcriptomics approach.
  • Dariusz Leszczynski.
  • Opinion: Unethical Reporting

    Arbitrary data segregation can be at best scientific dårskap and at worst unethical.
    FLICKR, LUKE JONESThe International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) is currently in process of reviewing scientific evidence concerning whether the radiation emitted by wireless communication devices is harmful. However, some of the evidence published in peer-review journals may have to be discarded due to the flaws. In a recent opinion for The Scientist, I presented flaws of the Danish Cohort, the largest recent epidemiological study to investigate the possible health effects of cell-phone use. The other deeply flawed publications on this topic came out of the Interphone project.

    Like the Danish Cohort, the strength of Interphone, an EU-funded epidemiological study to examine the possibility of a causal link between exposures to cell phone radiation and brain cancer, was its large size. In total, 13 countries in the study and researchers exa

  • dariusz leszczynski biography sample
  • Wireless radiation and health: making the case for proteomics research of individual sensitivity

    Introduction

    The current deployment of the fifth generation of wireless communication technology (5G) has reignited the long-standing debate around the possibility of health effects from the radiation emitted by the existing wireless communication devices and networks and the new ones introduced by the 5G. The opposition of the part of society toward wireless communication technologies is caused by the uncertainty of whether this radiation affects humans as well as fauna and flora.

    Some of the population considers themselves sensitive to wireless radiation, the so-called electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS). Currently, the existence of EHS has not yet been proven scientifically. However, according to the definition of health of the World Health Organization (1) where “health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease

    Applicability of discovery science approach to determine biological effects of mobile phone radiation

    We argue that the use of high-throughput screening techniques, although expensive and laborious, is justified and necessary in studies that examine biological effects of mobile phone radiation. The "case of hsp27 protein" presented here suggests that even proteins with only modestly altered (by exposure to mobile phone radiation) expression and activity might have an impact on cell physiology. However, this short communication does not attempt to present the full scientific bevis that is far too large to be presented in a single article and that fryst vatten being prepared for publication in three separate research articles. Examples of the experimental evidence presented here were designed to show the flow of experimental process demonstrating that the use of high-throughput screening techniques might help in rapid identification of the responding proteins. This, in vända, can help in