Title :
Dosimetric Assessment of Simultaneous Exposure to ELF Electric and Magnetic Fields
Author :
Leitgeb, Norbert ; Cech, Roman
Author_Institution :
Graz Univ. of Technol., Graz
Abstract :
In the low-frequency range, both electric and magnetic fields interact with biological tissue by inducing intracorporal electric current densities, although ruled by different physical laws and, hence, with different intracorporal orientation and pathways. Presently, standards require a separate assessment of electric and magnetic fields even in the case of simultaneous exposure and, hence, ignore the superposition of intracorporal current densities. Numerical simulations with the Visible Man model show that this can lead to underestimating current densities in the central nervous system (CNS) by up to 29%. While the superposed electric current densities in the CNS still meet the basic restrictions, the situation changes if a fetus with its own CNS requires the same level of protection. When the compliance volume is extended to the trunk, the reference-level electric-field exposure exceeds the basic restrictions by 38%. Depending on the kind of summation of the vectorial contributions, simultaneous exposure to the 50 Hz-5 kV/m electric field and 100-T magnetic field may lead to a 2.1-fold to 2.6-fold excess of the basic restriction. While this does not prove noncompliance, it indicates that fetal CNS exposure modeling is needed for clarification.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; biomagnetism; current density; dosimetry; neurophysiology; physiological models; ELF electric fields; ELF magnetic fields; Visible Man model; biological tissue; central nervous system; dosimetric assessment; fetal CNS exposure modeling; frequency 50 Hz; intracorporal electric current densities; intracorporal orientation; intracorporal pathways; magnetic flux density 100 muT; Biological tissues; Central nervous system; Current density; Fetus; Geophysical measurement techniques; Ground penetrating radar; Lead; Magnetic fields; Numerical simulation; Protection; Basic restrictions; basic restrictions; dosimetry; fetus; foetus; health risk assessment; numerical simulation; reference levels; Body Burden; Computer Simulation; Electricity; Electromagnetic Fields; Environmental Exposure; Humans; Models, Biological; Relative Biological Effectiveness; Whole-Body Counting;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2007.901023