Love to get tattooed? Beware, the ink and needle used
may raise your risk of getting diseases like Hepatitis B, C, HIV, and even
cancers of the liver and blood, warned doctors on Wednesday.
Tattoos
have become very popular, especially among the youth, as a form of body art and
a means of expressing their thoughts or passion.
A a recent study of 11,905 individuals, by
researchers at Lund University in Sweden, tattooed individuals were found to
have a higher risk of lymphoma.The risk of lymphoma was highest in individuals with
less than two years since their first tattoo.The risk associated with tattoo exposure seemed to be
highest for large B-cell lymphoma and follicular lymphoma."This is because the tattoo ink, which may
contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) -- a known carcinogen, is
injected into the skin. The body treats it as a foreign object that should not
be there, and the immune system gets activated. A large part of the ink is
transported away from the skin, to the lymph nodes where it is deposited,"
said Tushar Tayal, Consultant, Internal Medicine, CK Birla Hospital, Gurugram.Recently, Australia's Department of Health also
surveyed the composition of tattoo inks and found a mismatch between the
labelling and the contents.They found PAHs in 20 per cent of the samples tested
and in 83 per cent of the black inks. Other hazardous components found in the
inks included heavy metals like mercury, barium, copper, amines, and various
colourants."These hazardous chemicals may cause simple
ailments like skin problems to the more dangerous skin cancers," Suhail
said.He explained that the "ink may get absorbed from
the dermis (outer layer of the skin) into the lymphatic system of the body and
may increase the risk of some other cancers like liver, urinary bladder as well
as blood cancers like lymphoma and leukaemia".
The hazardous chemicals in the tattoo ink are primarily responsible for these
dangerous ailments and until the time health care authorities strictly regulate
the contents of such inks, this risk will always remain.
"While
not all tattoo inks contain these cancer-causing chemicals, we need to exercise
caution while getting a tattoo since in India, there are no regulatory
frameworks that govern this," Suhail said.
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