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Are Cell Phones Mutating The Shape Of Our Bones?

Astonishing Link Between Smartphones And The Human Bone

By Kelly JohnsonPublished 6 months ago 3 min read
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This is an unexpected new topic that has recently been all over the media. It stems from a scientific report that suggests using phones and tablets can cause serious and long-lasting changes to our bodies—and not in the way that you might have thought in the past. What if cellphones were so powerful that they could change the shape of our bones?

A few years ago, biomechanics experts David Shahar and Mark Sayers of Australia's University of the Sunshine Coast conducted a study that examined how mechanical rules relate to living things, such as how insects beat their wings and humans run.

Osteobiography is another aspect of Shahar and Sayers' research that is utilized to infer information about a person's past from their skeleton.

Every set of bones has a story to tell; for instance, some remarkably large skeletons were discovered on the Pacific island of Tinian in 1924. Stone structures nearby explained the substantial nature of the island's bones, as workers with heavy stones had naturally developed larger arms, legs, and collarbones. Meanwhile, Shaw Heart and Sayers in Australia believe that modern technology is changing the skeletons of young people. They attribute this to something called an external occipital protuberance, or EOP.

Although some specialists and pundits have been more colorful and have called it a foam ball or a devil's horn, the EOP is actually a growth of bone located in the back of the skull that is attached to the nuchal ligament, a crucial ligament that helps connect the Nick muscles to the skull. The EOP has a significant impact.

Like an anchor at the top of the nuchal ligament. Now, let's go back to the original purpose of the study, which was to examine chiropractors' x-rays of patients between the ages of 18 and 86. The goal was to gain a current understanding of how skeletons change because many of these x-rays looked into conditions like neck pain. There was also an element of potential health effects of these changes.

Text neck is another term for the phenomenon. In 2016, Shah Harden Sayers reported a larger Yi Opie and 67% of men compared to 20% of women based on a test group of 218 people. By 2018, they had looked at 1200 people, and men appeared to be 5 times more likely to get these large texts necks. The fundings also revealed that it was mostly found in men. However, what might be the effects on humanity? We frequently hear about the possible cancer-causing effects of radiation from phones, but can using a mobile device really lead to serious health issues?

This recent report has sparked discussions on the subject because it's the first time that medical professionals have openly acknowledged the negative effects of technology on human health. Sayers and Shahar explained the extended yo PS as a degenerative process, meaning that young people's situation will only worsen if they continue using their devices. There is also a condition known as text thumb, or thumb arthritis, where the thumb can develop severe issues akin to the dreaded carpal tunnel syndrome; however, the study of EOPS, which has been dubbed "horns where spikes" by some in the press, has drawn criticism from experts who point out that the report is not conclusive and poses assumptions, just like any scientific paper

Longer skull bones are nothing new, according to archaeologists, and they are more prevalent in men. The general consensus, according to the studies' detractors, is that there isn't enough concrete evidence to support the idea that using a cell phone can actually transform you into Hellboy. So, are Shahar and Sayers onto something, or have they just taken known facts and fitted them into their own narrative? Regardless, there is no doubting the profound influence that technology has on our lives.

The notion that future generations are evolving as a result of their constant interaction with technology is a serious problem that must be addressed in the end. Future archaeologists will be the ones to make that determination; who knows, maybe they won't even have large spikes protruding from the back of their necks then. So, perhaps there will be less angry birds and more park walks in the future.

Science
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Kelly Johnson

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