Weekend Herald

Dr Michelle Dickinson,

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Humans have marked their bodies with permanent tattoos for thousands of years to show off their social status, religious beliefs, declaratio­ns of love or just an appreciati­on of art.

For years, tattoos were thought to stay in the skin because a dye was injected deep into the dermal layer, staining the skin cells or fibroblast­s located there. Research published this week in the Journal of Experiment­al Medicine sheds new light on how tattoos stay stationary in the skin and it's much more of an active process than previously thought. Contrary to popular belief, tattoo needles don't penetrate very deep into the skin, and instead of injecting like a syringe needle they act more like a fountain pen.

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large in size, it can't be drained into the lymph nodes through the lymphatic vessels so rather than drain the debris, the ink containing macrophage­s just settle into the dermis and keep the body protected from the foreign ink by encapsulat­ing it.

To test this theory further, the researcher­s used mice that had been geneticall­y engineered to have macrophage­s that were easy to kill off. They then exposed the tattooed mice to diphtheria which killed off the macrophage­s in the local area. They found that there was no visible change in the tattoo even when the original macrophage­s were destroyed because new macrophage­s arrived immediatel­y to eat the invasive ink particles and keep it in place.

Understand­ing how tattoos remain in the skin and the importance of macrophage­s could help to develop a new way to remove unwanted tattoos.

Currently, pulsed lasers are used to blast macrophage­s full of ink into chunks small enough that the lymphatic system can drain them away. This laser removal method is painful and can take several sessions sometimes only resulting in fading of the tattoo rather than complete removal.

This new research opens up opportunit­ies that could involve temporaril­y killing off or removing macrophage­s in the area with the use of antibodies instead of lasers, which is less painful and could result in faster removal.

So the next time you look at a tattoo and think of it as a static piece of art, remember that tattoos are actually maintained by an everchangi­ng immune system war which involves cycles of gobbling up pigment, cell death and eating pigment all over again.

 ?? Picture / 123RF ?? Cells called macrophage­s gobble up foreign tattoo ink to protect the body from further invasion.
Picture / 123RF Cells called macrophage­s gobble up foreign tattoo ink to protect the body from further invasion.

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