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"An assault!" What a tattoo does to the human body is more dangerous than it seems

Criticized as much as they are adored s, tattoos could cause much worse than a few aesthetic regrets.

Riding on a period of unparalleled popularity, tattoos attract more and more people.& nbsp;Although the 18-35 age group is the most likely to take the plunge, they concern a very large part of the French population, and ;at very heterogeneous ages. However, although very fashionable, tattoos are also at the heart of many debates, in the family circle, among friends and even in the professional world. The questions their subject very often focuses on symbolism, what they represent, the colors and products used by tattoo artists, but less on their effects on health…

In France, around 13 million people are tattooed, or more than one in five French people, but many have no idea what the ink contains or what its effect is on the body. So a scientist studied how the body reacts to ink injections into the skin.

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Christel Nielsen, associate professor of occupational and environmental medicine at Lund University in Sweden, noticed that the body perceives tattoo ink as a foreign body to be eliminated and creates an immune response to “this assault.” This response causes a large portion of the ink particles to end up in the lymph nodes, which filter out bacteria and damaged or cancerous cells.

"An assault!" What a tattoo does to the human body is more dangerous than it seems

Based on this observation, Christel Nielsen conducted new research to determine what impact the presence of tattoo ink in the lymphatic system could have on health. She was able to observe that people with tattoos had a 21% higher risk of lymphoma. than non-tattooed ones.

These results raise questions, since in France, nearly 11,000 new cases of lymphoma are diagnosed each year, according to the Curie Institute. The researcher adds that the risk does not actually come from the size or appearance of the tattoo, but rather from the date it was done. performed. According to her, the risk seems higher for tattoos done less than two years ago, as well as for those dating back more than 10 years.

Christel Nielsen is not, however, alarmist, stating that this study alone is not enough to give tattoo recommendations, but that it must still be taken into account when possible health problems arise. The results of this study demonstrate less a link between the appearance of lymphoma and the presence of a tattoo on the body, than the importance of strict health rules on the composition of these tattoo inks.

Teilor Stone

By Teilor Stone

Teilor Stone has been a reporter on the news desk since 2013. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining Thesaxon , Teilor Stone worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my teilor@nizhtimes.com 1-800-268-7116