New Australian research has found carcinogenic compounds in some tattoo inks – here’s what it means for your health.
How Did the Tattoo-Cancer Study Work? The Departments of Public Health and Clinical Research at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) teamed up with the University of Helsinki for studies that ...
American women will develop breast cancer in their lifetime — often leading to long and arduous treatments that change the way a woman's body looks. But there's an option for women after treatment ...
HOUSTON -- Every year, nearly 250,000 women find out the heartbreaking news that they have been diagnosed with breast cancer. For the 1 in 8 women the American Cancer Society says are living ...
Potentially harmful, cancer-causing substances have been found inside tattoo inks used in Australia, researchers have found.
A recently published Utah study suggests that greater exposure to tattoos may be associated with a lower melanoma risk, providing a pathway for future cancer research.
Inside Tara Williamson’s Louisburg business, breast cancer survivors are met with something familiar – needles. Only here, the needles aren’t used to deliver chemotherapy or radiation. Other WRAL Top ...
Some research has found a link between tattoos and an increased risk of cancer, and recent evidence appears to suggest that tattoos could heighten the risk of blood cancer, in particular. What ...
Although it might seem like tattoos are the ‘modern generation obsession’, the culture of inking goes back centuries with a ...
Danish twin study found people with large tattoos (bigger than palm-sized) had 2.73 times higher rate of developing lymphoma and 2.37 times higher rate of skin cancer Tattoo ink particles migrate ...
A paramedical tattoo artist in Monterey is helping breast cancer survivors who have undergone mastectomies regain their confidence. A paramedical tattoo artist in Monterey is helping Breast Cancer ...
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