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Tattooing: immediate and long-term adverse reactions and complications

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29 gru 2024

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Figure 1

Distribution of tattoo pigments after injection into the skin. HIV – human immunodeficiency virus
Distribution of tattoo pigments after injection into the skin. HIV – human immunodeficiency virus

Figure 2

Possible avenues of in silico analysis to predict the adverse effects of tattoo ink components
Possible avenues of in silico analysis to predict the adverse effects of tattoo ink components

Immediate, delayed, and long-term adverse effects and complications of tattooing

Adverse effects/complications Cause/Clinical features Onset
Immediate
Iritation/inflammation Skin damage, lymphadenopathy Shortly after tattooing
MRI burn Pain, subjective sensation of burning During MRI
Delayed
Infection
Bacterial Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Psudomonas, Clostridium species, nontuberculous mycobacteria, etc. First few days
Viral Hepatitis B, C, human immunodeficiency virus, papilloma, and herpes simplex viruses Weeks to months
Mycotic Zygomicota After months
Other
Allergy Tattoo ink ingredients (e.g., nickel) Days/weeks/years
Photoallergic reaction (hives-like reaction) Tattoo ink with cadmium sulphide; possibly ROS-mediated After sun exposure
Skin disease in tattooed area Clinical features: psoriasis, lichen planus, pseudolymphoma, pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia Weeks to years
Long-term
Idiopathic benign accumulation of inflammatory cells Cutaneous pseudolymphoma Weeks to years
Malignant diseases Carcinoma basocellular, melanoma, keratoacanthoma, lymphoma Weeks to years

Pigments contained in tattoo inks

Colour Pigments Ref.
Black Iron oxide (Fe3O4), iron oxide (FeO), carbon, logwood 9, 15, 17, 18
White Titanium dioxide (TiO2), zinc (Zn), lead (Pb) 9
Brown Ochre (an ancient pigment), iron (Fe) 9, 11
Red Cinnabar (HgS), cadmium red (CdSe), iron oxide (Fe2O3), napthol-AS pigment (C26H22N4O4), quinacridone (C20H12N2O2), azo compounds 9, 11
Purple Cobalt (Co), manganese (Mn) 17, 18
Orange Disazodiarylide (C34H30Cl2N6O4) and/or disazopyrazolone (C32H24Cl2N8O2), cadmium selenide sulphide (Cd2SeS) 17, 18,
Yellow Cadmium sulphide (CdS), azo compounds, lead (Pb) 17, 18
Brown May contain iron oxides, e.g., ochre, iron (Fe) 17
Green Cobalt oxide (CoO) or chromium oxide (Cr2O3), phthalocyanine green (C32Cl16CuN8), a mix of cobalt chromate (CoCr2O4) and lead chromate (PbCrO4) 17, 18
Blue Aluminium cobalt oxides (Al2Co2O5), copper phthalocyanine (C32H16CuN8), nickel (Ni) 16, 17, 18

Methods for detection and identification of adverse effects of tattooing

Test Principle Method
Ex vivo on cells Addition of tattoo ink (component) to isolated cells (lymphocytes, macrophages) Flow cytometry
Ex vivo on cell culture or reconstructed human skin models (RHS) Application of tattoo ink (component) on RHS Reflectance spectroscopy
Experiments on sacrificed animals (a year after injection of tattoo ink) Detection of deposits of tattoo pigments in the Kupfer cells Light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy
Human trials
Skin biopsy Qualitative and quantitative analysis histology analysis; immunohistochemistry analysis; micro-X-ray fluorescence analysis (μ-XRF); laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS)
Case reports Description of side effects in individual patients Clinical identification and laboratory testing
Epidemiological research Description of side effects on a large number of subjects Examining the connection between tattooing and side effects (e.g., link between ink and cancer)
In silico Computer models of cellular behaviour Computer simulation software
Języki:
Angielski, Croatian, Slovenian
Częstotliwość wydawania:
4 razy w roku
Dziedziny czasopisma:
Medycyna, Podstawowe nauki medyczne, Podstawowe nauki medyczne, inne