No Measurable Impact of Acute 26 GHz 5G Exposure on Salivary Stress Markers in Healthy Adults
Abstract
Overview
The rapid deployment of fifth generation (5G) wireless networks has raised concerns about potential health effects associated with exposure to novel radiofrequency electromagnetic field (RF) frequencies, particularly the 26 GHz band, representing a new exposure scenario for the general population. Prior use in telecommunications of this frequency is limited, so current evidence for acute biological impact remains scarce and inconclusive. This fact highlights a crucial need for ongoing studies to monitor for health risks and guide EMF safety standards.
Findings
- Objective: This study assessed whether short-term (26.5 minutes) 5G RF exposure at 26 GHz, at levels similar to real-world environmental exposure, affects salivary cortisol and alpha-amylase—both established biomarkers of stress and autonomic nervous system activity.
- Methods: Thirty-one healthy adults participated in a triple-blind, randomized protocol, including EEG measurements. Sixteen of them also took part in an exploratory protocol with cognitive assessment and high temporal sampling (every 5 minutes).
- Results: Saliva samples collected before, during, and after RF/sham exposure were analyzed. Exposure levels were 2 V/m (head) and 1 V/m (torso), simulating upper-range environmental exposures.
- Analysis: No significant differences in salivary cortisol or alpha-amylase concentrations were found between real and sham exposures. Analysis of the cognitive protocol group revealed no temporal changes, indicating biomarker stability under both conditions.
Conclusion
- Findings suggest that acute 26 GHz 5G RF exposure does not elicit measurable changes in the tested stress biomarkers in healthy adults, under rigorous and controlled laboratory conditions.
- It is important to note that this study only addresses short-term exposure. Further research is warranted to evaluate repeated or long-term exposures—especially in vulnerable populations—recognizing the ongoing link between EMF exposure and health considerations.
Highlights
- 26.5-min 5G exposure at 26 GHz showed no effect on salivary cortisol levels.
- No changes seen in alpha-amylase levels in healthy adults.
- Rigorous design controlled potential confounding variables.
- No acute stress effects detected from 26 GHz 5G exposure.
- More research needed for long-term effects and at-risk groups.