Publication | Closed Access
Carcinogenic effect of sequential artificial sunlight and UV-A irradiation in hairless mice. Consequences for solarium 'therapy'.
46
Citations
7
References
1983
Year
Radiation EffectSequential Artificial SunlightDermatologyTumor BiologyHairless MouseOncologySolarium 'TherapyPhototoxicityToxicologyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchHealth SciencesSkin CancerPhotochemistryArtificial Sunlight ExposureRadiation EffectsTumor MicroenvironmentPhotocarcinogenesisUv-a IrradiationPhotoprotectionMedicine
The carcinogenic effect of artificial UV sunlight followed by UV-A irradiation in human solaria doses has been studied with the use of the hairless mouse as an animal model. Artificial sunlight exposure alone induced only a moderate skin tumor incidence (animals with at least one tumor) of 0.15 after one year, and UV-A irradiation alone induced no tumor formation. However, the combination of artificial sunlight exposure and subsequent UV-A irradiation significantly increased the tumor incidence to 0.72. We conclude that, in humans, tanning with UV-A for cosmetic purposes may not be an innocuous procedure.
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