According to the report, those who spent 30 minutes a week talking even hands-free on their cell phones were 12% more at risk to suffer hypertension. It further disclosed that spending six hours a week chatting on a cell phone raised the risk to 25%.
Further research
shows that from Southern Medical University (SWNS) in Guangzhou, China, has
revealed that talking on a mobile phone even if it is for a very short time can
raise the risk of high blood pressure, a British news agency reports.
Scientists
say blood pressure remains a major cause of heart attacks and strokes.
The
research was published on May 5, 2023 in the European Heart Journal – Digital
Health, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology.
According
to the report, the SWNS team analysed some 212,000 people from the U.K.
Biobank, a database which contains genetic and other health information on half
a million British people. Those that were examined were free of hypertension at
the outset.
The study
included a sample size containing a total of 212,046 adults between the age of
37 to 73 years who were without hypertension. It said they were tracked for an
average of 12 years.
The study
revealed that participants who spoke on a mobile phone for 30 minutes or more
per week had increased risk at 12% when compared to peers who used cell phones
less regularly.
Participants
with a weekly usage time of 30 to 59 minutes; 1-3 hours; 4-6 hours; and over 6
hours were associated with the corresponding risks of 8%, 13%, 16%, and 25%
increased risk, the researchers said.
The study
went further to say that the likelihood of developing high blood pressure rose
by 33% in those with a high genetic risk who spent at least 30 minutes a week
talking on a mobile phone.
Overall,
mobile phone users had a 7% higher risk than non-users, the study reported.
Lead
author of the research, Professor Xianhui Qin said, “It’s the number of minutes
people spend talking on a mobile that matters for heart health, with more
minutes meaning greater risk.”
“Years of
use or employing a hands-free set-up did not influence the likelihood of
developing high blood pressure.”
Regarding
the study’s result, Professor Qin said their “findings suggest that talking on
a mobile may not affect the risk of developing high blood pressure as long as
weekly call time is kept below half an hour.
“Mobile
phones emit low levels of radiofrequency energy, which has been linked with
rises in blood pressure after short-term exposure.
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