Texarkana Gazette

Reactions to tattoos potentiall­y debilitati­ng

- By Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D. Drs. Oz & Roizen

The Missouri Compromise, signed into law in 1820 by President James Monroe, allowed Maine into the union as a free state and Missouri in as a slave state, maintainin­g the balance of power between North and South in the U.S. Senate. Clearly, compromise—so often touted as a more civilized way to govern—sometimes can be downright wrong.

Well, a compromise­d immune system is equally unfortunat­e, and certain choices that you make can prove downright harmful to your body politic! That’s the message of a new study in BMJ Case Reports.

The case the researcher­s presented was of a young woman who got at at too while taking immunosupp­ressive drugs. She developed severe chronic pain in her left knee and thigh. A biopsy revealed that she had inflammato­ry myopathy—chronic muscle inflammati­on. It took three years of physical therapy and pain medication­s to make her pain-free.

Who has a compromise­d immune system? Anyone with AIDS; cancer (chemothera­py); an organ transplant being treated wit him mu no suppress ive drugs; those with inherited immune system disorders; and some folks with diabetes or some autoimmune diseases.

Over 20 percent of Americans have at least one tattoo. Among those 18 to 29, it’s closer to 40 percent (18 percent have six or more). So there’s a lot of overlap, and risk.

The smart step: Skip the tattoo. After all, the Food and Drug Administra­tion says that many tattoo dyes are made for “printer toner or car paint,” not injection into the human body. And there’s never any reason to voluntaril­y compromise your health.

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