Healthy Skin Association

Tattoo Removal Product Information

28 Aug

TCA Report Coming Soon

Posted in Tattoo removal, tca, tca tattoo removal on 28.08.09

We’re  alerting everyone  to an upcoming report on TCA as a tattoo removal product. There is no perfect tattoo removal product on the market. Laser  gets better press than it sometimes deserves. It can burn, leave scars and fail to remove some of the lighter pigment colors at an extremely high price. IPL is a form of light used to remove tattoos, but it also has its drawbacks.

Our upcoming report on TCA tattoo removal will be very revealing and of major interest to those currently considering the removal of a tattoo.

Stay  tuned, you won’t be disappointed.

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18 Aug

New Tattoo Removal Product- Effectiveness Unkown

Posted in skin fade cream, tattoo removal cream on 18.08.09

A new product joined the growing number of competitors in the burgeoning tattoo removal market the beginning of last month. Tatmed.com, a spin off of the  skin fade cream Medliten.wordpress.com is the latest cream, or gel as it refers to itself, to enter the market. Using the same ingredients as Medliten,  renaming itself Tatmed and advising potential customers to purchase an exfoliation pad, it hopes to capture  market share with a slick marketing campaign in conjunction with SkinHealthAssociation which ranks it the best of the at home tattoo removal products although it has only been on the market since about July 1, 2009. The new product website boasted several testimonials from day one, hopefully from pre-market testing, but it’s not clear from information on the website.

To early to tell if it actually removes tattoo pigment, but we do believe it will fade skin pigment judging from the list of intimate locations Medliten lists as potential areas of use.

Go to Tatmed.com and study the site guarantee for further information.

Be sure to compare these two products. More product choices is good for competition.

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16 Aug

For Healthy Skin, Who Do You Trust?

Posted in Tattoo removal, reliable tattoo removers, skin care trust, tattoo removal product guarantees, trusted tattoo removers on 16.08.09

When economic conditions become depressed, as they currently are, how does one know who to trust when it comes to something as important as the removal of a tattoo?

First of all look at the track record of the person or entity dispensing the information. Tattoo removal products that have been around a while are more likely to have a trail of information about them that can give clues as to their honesty and integrity.  Look at their site and be sure to checkout the guarantee offered by the company. If they stand behind their product by offering a short, to the point and easily understood guarantee that gives plenty of time to test the product, then they are more than likely a trustworthy company.

If a product offering is being made by a company that started as the economy started going bad they could be experiencing financial problems which cause them to offer a poor or no guarantee at all.

Always make sure you understand the terms of the guarantee. Call or email the company if necessary for clarification.

If they have no phone number or email address displayed it might be best to avoid them all together. Why would a company with any integrity offer no way to communicate with them?

Anonymous  communication forms also offer a glimpse into the way a company does business. If they are anonymous you have to wonder why they wish to remain hidden.

In times of financial distress it is best to stick with the older established companies that sell the type of  tattoo removal product you are interested in. If they all operate the same way, in an anonymous fashion that should give a hint as to the reliability of that industry’s entire removal method.

In the end we are all responsible for our decisions and actions.

Prudence should be the foundation for all financial  decisions in a bad economy.

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08 Aug

The Anatomy of a Tattoo

Posted in Tattoo removal, The Anatomy of a Tattoo, laser tattoo removal, pigment carriers, pigment colors, pigment toxicity, tattoo removal cream, tattoo science, tca tattoo removal on 08.08.09

Tattoo Inks Are An Unknown Quantity

Tattoo ink manufacturers are not required by law to list their ingredients. Many tattoo artists mix their own formulas and consider their mixtures “trade secrets”. These tattoo inks are actually pigments suspended in a variety of carrier solutions. Some are made from ABS plastic for the vibrancy of the colors, some are vegetable dyes, but the vast majority are made from metal salts. The main concern with the pigments is what is in them besides the carrier solutions and the dyes.

Tattoo shops that do not adhere to strict safety precautions may be exposing their customers to a wide variety of infections as the artist dips the needle in an infected person and then back into the ink container, then into a new customer’s skin. Fortunately most shops are aware of these dangers and take all precautions established by local and state health departments.

Pigment Toxicity

Some pigments can cause an allergic reaction between the ink and skin. If available, look at a MSDS sheet to determine what the possible reactions might be. The reactions can result in photo sensitivity of the tattoo to natural and artificial light or even scarring. The glow in the dark inks, or those that react to black light, can be harmless, radioactive or toxic. The ABS plastic based pigments can prove very difficult to remove should the client choose to have the tattoo removed at a later date. Most inks pose no threat or visible reaction to the skin, but the lack of regulations make some inks risky, be sure to use a reputable artist who will not mind explaining the components of the ink used in your tattoo.

Pigment Carriers

The job of the carrier is to keep the pigment from clumping and in a fluid consistency, inhibit contamination and ease the injection of the ink into the skin. The safest and most common carriers are ethyl alcohol, glycerin, purified water, propylene glycol, witch hazel, and listerine. In the “old days” it was not uncommon to use various forms of alcohol, usually denatured, and other toxic liquids, chemicals or contaminated water.

Tattoo Pigment Being Injected into the Dermis

Tattoo Pigment Being Injected into the Dermis

  • BLACK: made of iron oxides, carbon, or logwood. “Natural black pigment is made from magnetite crystals, powdered jet, wustite, bone black,and amorphous carbon from combustion (soot). Black pigment is commonly made into India ink. Logwood is a heartwood extract from Haematoxylon campechisnum, found in Central America and the West Indies.”
  • BROWNS: made of ochre. “Ochre is composed of iron (ferric) oxides mixed with clay. Raw ochre is yellowish. When dehydrated through heating, ochre changes to a reddish color.”
  • RED: made of cinnabar, cadmium red, iron oxide, or napthol. “Iron oxide is also known as common rust. Cinnabar and cadmium pigments are highly toxic. Napthol reds are synthesized from Naptha. Fewer reactions have been reported with naphthol red than the other pigments, but all reds carry risks of allergic or other reactions.”
  • ORANGE: made of disazodiarylide, disazopyrazolone, or cadmium seleno-sulfide. “The organics are formed from the condensation of 2 monoazo pigment molecules. They are large molecules with good thermal stability and colorfastness.”
  • YELLOW: made of cadmium yellow, ochres, curcuma yellow, chrome yellow, or disazodiarylide. “Curcuma is derived from plants of the ginger family; aka tumeric or curcurmin. Reactions are commonly associated with yellow pigments, in part because more pigment is needed to achieve a bright color.”
  • GREEN: made of chromium oxide (“Casalis Green” or “Anadomis Green”), Malachite, Ferrocyanides, Ferricyanides, Lead chromate, Monoazo pigment, Cu/Al phthalocyanine, or Cu phthalocyanine. “The greens often include admixtures, such as potassium ferrocyanide (yellow or red) and ferric ferrocyanide (Prussian Blue).”
  • BLUE: made of azure blue, cobalt blue, or Cu-phtalocyanine. “Blue pigments from minerals include copper (II) carbonate (azurite), sodium aluminum silicate (lapis lazuli), calcium copper silicate (Egyptian Blue), other cobalt aluminum oxides and chromium oxides. The safest blues and greens are copper salts, such as copper pthalocyanine. Copper pthalocyanine pigments have FDA approval for use in infant furniture and toys and contact lenses. The copper-based pigments are considerably safer or more stable than cobalt or ultramarine pigments.”
  • VIOLET: made of manganese violet (manganese ammonium pyrophosphate), quinacridone, dioxazine/carbazole, and various aluminum salts. “Some of the purples, especially the bright magentas, are photoreactive and lose their color after prolonged exposure to light. Dioxazine and carbazole result in the most stable purple pigments.”
  • WHITE: made of lead white (lead carbonate), titanium dioxide, barium sulfate, or zinc oxide. “Some white pigments are derived from anatase or rutile. White pigment may be used alone or to dilute the intensity of other pigments. Titanium oxides are one of the least reactive white pigments.”

Tattoo Science

Electric tattoo guns create  thousands of puncture wounds in the skin so that the tattoo pigment can be injected to form the tattoo. The ink particles are effectively trapped by a network of connective tissue in the fibroblasts, a type of cell found in connective tissue that produces fibers such as collagen. It is not known for sure, but fibroblasts may last the lifespan of the individual receiving the tattoo.

This entire process causes damage to the epidermis and the dermis and become blended together as a result of the pulverization of the junction of the two layers. The body responds by bleeding up through the skin as a result of the severed capillaries. The immune system responds by swelling to shut down the blood flow.  The immune response cells then begin cleaning up by flushing the ink through the lymph system. At first the ink is dispersed in the upper areas of the skin, but within 1 to 2 weeks it gathers into a more concentrated area as new tissue begins to form around the ink and traps it in the dermal fibroblasts. After a month the two layers of skin have reformed to trap the ink and within 3 months the tattoo ink is completely surrounded by connective tissue that holds the ink in place, although over time it will begin to subside deeper into the dermis, or second layer of skin. By the time the tattoo pigment has combined with the dermal fibroblasts it is highly unlikely a simple tattoo removal cream could ever remove the tattoo ink.

Final Thought

What all this means is be sure to think long and hard before getting a tattoo. Find out who runs the cleanest shop in the area and make sure the design is something you are willing to live with for the rest of your life.

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