“…In primary pinealocyte cultures exposed in vitro to 60 Hz 0.05 mT vertical AC and 0.06 mT DC fields, melatonin production declined by almost 50% [Rosen et al, 1998], but in vivo studies of melatonin and other neurohormones revealed either increases [Lerchl et al, 1998;Zecca et al, 1998], decreases [Burch et al, 1999[Burch et al, , 2000Karasek et al, 1998;Reiter et al, 1998;Juutilainen et al, 2000], or no changes [Selmaoui et al, 1997;Truong and Yellon, 1997;Graham et al, 2000]. Pulsed microwave exposure at up to SAR 0.3 W/kg did not disrupt the normal circadian profile of melatonin or other hormones of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis de Seze et al, 1998de Seze et al, , 1999, with the only exception of a commercial dairy herd kept in close proximity to a short wave (3-30 MHz) radio transmitter station. The animals in this herd, but not in another one, kept at a larger distance, exhibited a transient increase in salivary melatonin after the radio station was temporarily switched off [Stark et al, 1997].…”