Are Wind Turbines Detrimental to your Health?
July 2010
Editor: Conventional wisdom states that what you can't hear won't hurt
you. It turns out that statement may be incorrect, as scientists explore
something called "wind turbine syndrome", which affects people who live near
wind turbines.
Here's the press releasse from the folks at the National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
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A wind turbine is a rotary device with a gigantic propeller as big as a
football field that turns in the wind to generate electricity. Although wind
turbines are more often found in Europe than in the United States, they're
rapidly becoming more popular here as a green energy source. Most people
consider that a good thing, except the rotors of wind turbines also generate
noise, particularly in the infrasound range, that some people claim makes
them feel sick.
Since frequencies that low can't be heard, many scientists who study
hearing have assumed they can't have any effect on the function of the ear.
But a little-known phenomenon related to the infrasound generated by wind
turbines is making some scientists challenge the common wisdom that what we
can't hear won't hurt us.
Infrasound is a subset of sound broadly defined as any sound lower than
20 Hertz (Hz), which is the lowest pitch that most people can hear. It's all
around us, even though we might only be barely able to hear a lot of it. The
whoosh of wind in the trees, the pounding of surf, and the deep rumble of
thunder are natural sources of infrasound. Whales and other animals use
infrasound calls to communicate across long distances. There is also a wide
range of manmade infrasounds, for example, the noise generated by industrial
machinery, traffic, and heating and cooling systems in buildings.
Alec Salt, PhD, is a researcher supported by the National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), Bethesda, Md, at
Washington University in St Louis, who studies the inner ear. For years, he
and his group have been using infrasound as a way to slowly displace the
structures of the inner ear so that their movement can be observed. In their
experiments, infrasound levels as low as 5Hz had an impact on the inner ears
of guinea pigs.
"We were doing lots of work with low-frequency tones," says Salt, "and we
were getting big responses." What they were observing in the lab, however,
didn't jibe with the scientific literature about hearing sensitivity, which
was in general agreement that the human ear doesn't respond to anything as
low as 5Hz. Since human ears are even more sensitive to low frequencies than
guinea pig ears, that didn't make sense.
Salt and a colleague conducted a literature search, focusing not on
papers about hearing sensitivity, but on the basic physiology of the inner
ear and how it responds to low-frequency sounds. During the search, Salt
found anecdotal reports of a group of symptoms commonly called "wind turbine
syndrome" that affect people who live close to wind turbines.
"The biggest problem people complain about is lack of sleep," says Salt,
but they can also develop headaches, difficulty concentrating, irritability
and fatigue, dizziness, and pain and pressure in the ear.
Continuing his search, Salt began to see a way in which infrasound could
impact the function of the inner ear, by the differences in how inner ear
cells respond to low frequencies. In function, our ear acts like a
microphone, converting sound waves into electrical signals that are sent to
the brain. It does this in the cochlea, the snail-shaped organ in the inner
ear that contains two types of sensory cells, inner hair cells (IHCs) and
outer hair cells (OHCs). Three rows of OHCs and one row of IHCs run the
length of the cochlea. When OHCs are stimulated by sound, special proteins
contract and expand within their walls to amplify the vibrations. These
vibrations cause hairlike structures (called stereocilia) on the tips of the
IHCs to ripple and bend. These movements are then translated into electrical
signals that travel to the brain through nerve fibers and are interpreted as
sound.
Only IHCs can transmit this sound signal to the brain. The OHCs act more
like mediators between sound frequencies and the IHCs. This wouldn't matter
if the OHC behaved the same way for all frequencies-the IHCs would respond
to what the OHC amplified-but they don't. It turns out that OHCs are highly
sensitive to infrasound, but when they encounter it, their proteins don't
flex their muscles like they do for sound frequencies in the acoustic range.
Instead they actively work to prevent IHC movement so that the sound is not
detected. So, while the brain may not hear the sound, the OHC responses to
it could influence function of the inner ear and cause unfamiliar sensations
in some people.
Salt and his colleagues still aren't sure why some people are sensitive
to infrasound and others aren't. It could be the result of anatomical
differences among individual ears, or it could be the result of underlying
medical conditions in the ear that cause the OHCs to be ultrasensitive to
infrasound.
Regardless, it might not be enough to place wind turbines further away
from human populations to keep them from being bothersome, since infrasound
has the ability to cover long distances with little dissipation. Instead,
Salt suggests wind turbine manufacturers may be able to re-engineer the
machines to minimize infrasound production. According to Salt, this wouldn't
be difficult. "Infrasound is a product of how close the rotor is to the
pole," he says, "which could be addressed by spacing the rotor further
away."