The deep stages of sleep—the part of sleep that allows the brain and body to repair and rejuvenate from the day's wear and tear. According to the study, monitoring under laboratory conditions showed the initial ‘light’ phases of sleep in the subjects were affected. In addition, “exposure to 884 MHz wireless signals, components of sleep, believed to be important, for recovery from daily wear and tear, are adversely affected
Electroencephalographic recordings documented prolonged
latency reaching stage 3 sleep(Deep sleep Transition) and a decreased amount of
stage 4 sleep(cerebral sleep) in subjects exposed to the wireless communication
signals.
The research also found that those exposed to mobile phones
during their sleep appear to have more headaches than those not exposed. Those
who were actually exposed to the radiation took longer to get into deep sleep.
They also spent less time in the deepest part of sleep.
The participants took an average of about six minutes longer
to reach the deep stage of sleep than when they had received the
"sham" exposure. They also spent an average of eight minutes less time
in the deepest "stage 4" sleep.
the radiation can trigger depression, mood swings, ADHD-like
symptoms, and personality changes, and impair concentration and academic
performance.
Some sleep researchers think today's teens are loading up on
"junk sleep" — the sleep equivalent of junk food — because they sleep
with so many distracting devices: cell phones tucked under their pillows,
handheld computer games on the bedside table, TVs, or music playing in the
background.
Competing with sleep:
So what's happening to a generation growing up on junk
sleep? They're becoming a generation of sleepy, sometimes moody, and irritable
teens who doze off in school.
"What parents probably experience most is the
difficulty waking the teen up in the morning," says Carskadon. "The
teachers will see it more. They'll see what I call the 'slack-jawed droolers,'
the kids who are not with it in the morning."
The National Sleep Foundation says school-aged children and adolescents need at least nine hours of sleep a night, but in a national survey conducted in 2006, only 20 percent of American teens said they get nine hours a night. Nearly half sleep less than eight hours on school nights and 28 percent of high-school students reported falling asleep in school at least once a week.
b)Sleep talking (somniloquy)
c)Night terror (pavor nocturnes)
d)Bruxism (tooth grinding )
e)Nocturnal enuresis (bed wetting) & along with it
synchronized activity of the brain is tampered with.
Effects on general healthSome members of the public have
attributed a diffuse collection of symptoms to low levels of exposure to
electromagnetic fields at home. Reported symptoms include headaches, anxiety,
suicide and depression, nausea, fatigue, and loss of libido. To date, scientific
evidence does not support a link between these symptoms and exposure to
electromagnetic fields. At least some of these health problems may be caused by
noise or other factors in the environment, or by anxiety related to the
presence of new technologies.
Conclusions from scientific researchIn the area of
biological effects and medical applications of non-ionizing radiation
approximately 25,000 articles have been published over the past 30 years.
Despite the feeling of some people that more research needs to be done,
scientific knowledge in this area is now more extensive than for most
chemicals. Based on a recent in-depth review of the scientific literature, the
WHO concluded that current evidence does not confirm the existence of any
health consequences from exposure to low-level electromagnetic fields. However,
some gaps in knowledge about biological effects exist and need further
research.
The above information and images were taken from different sites, it should be practiced/advised by a professional person.






