Growth Pattern of Magnetic Field Treated Bacteria
Samina Masood, Iram Saleem, Derek Smith, Wei-Kan Chu

TL;DR
This study investigates how weak magnetic fields influence bacterial growth, revealing that such exposure can decelerate growth rates across different bacterial species, with implications for understanding effects on human health and cellular processes.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence on the differential effects of various weak magnetic fields on bacterial growth patterns, a novel investigation linking magnetic exposure to microbiological responses.
Findings
Weak magnetic fields can slow bacterial growth.
Growth effects depend on bacterial species and magnetic field type.
Magnetic exposure effects persist after removal from the field.
Abstract
A study of the induced effect of different types of weak magnetic field exposure on bacterial growth is performed, comparing the relative changes after removal from the magnetic fields. This investigation is relevant to understand the effect of magnetic field exposure on human beings due to electronic devices. For this purpose, we use four species of common bacteria in reference to human health and safety including Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The choice of these four bacteria also allows us to check for effects which rely upon the Gram-staining properties or shapes of bacterial species. These species were initially exposed to static, non-homogeneous and alternating weak magnetic fields, and then they were grown in incubators in the same environment at 37 {\deg}C simultaneously. Comparative measurements of optical…
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