Abstract
An hour-long exposure of peritoneal neutrophils of mice to a combination of a weak constant magnetic field (42 μT) and low-frequency alternating magnetic fields collinear to the weak constant magnetic field (frequencies 1, 4.4, and 16.5 Hz, total amplitude 0.86 μT) at physiological temperatures promoted a significant increase in chemiluminescence of cells in response to subsequent exposure to low concentrations of respiratory burst activators (formylated peptide N-formyl-Met–Leu–Phe or phorbol ester phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate) in the presence of luminol. The response of human neutrophils isolated from peripheral blood to the pretreatment with combined magnetic fields followed by exposure to the activator N-formyl-Met–Leu–Phe was similar to the response of mouse neutrophils.
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