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Marked for life: the science of tattoos may make you think before you ink.


After I took my last exam of eleventh grade, I felt like I could do anything," says Jennifer Chowdhury, 20. In a burst of bravado Jennifer stepped into a New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 tattoo parlor, where a tattooist pumped needles into her skin up to 3,000 times per minute.

"I was coming to terms with my heritage, which is mixed," she says. Her father, whose ancestors were from India, cried when she was young. Now her family name is inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 on her ankle. But Jennifer bled and trembled from pain as the tattoo "gun" needled her flesh, skewing the letters on her skin.

Will she come to regret her impulse? A 1996 study of more than 2,000 U.S. high-school students shows that 10 percent of teens now sport tattoos--even though tattooing is illegal for teens in 18 states. But some experts think that for every teen who considers getting inked, another comes to lament the choice and wants his or her tattoo blotted out forever.

Debates rage over tattoos. Are they a celebration of the body or personal defacement--the result of not accepting one's body as it is? Do they express individual uniqueness or signal bowing to peer pressure? One thing seems clear: Branding a tattoo on your body is a lifelong decision- often a painful, potentially dangerous, and illegal one.

INKED INSIDE

Jennifer's tattoo is a permanent emblem because the ink is injected inside her skin. A drawing on the skin's surface layer, the epidermis (see diagram below), would vanish in a few days. That's because the surface layer of the epidermis consists of dead skin cells that constantly flake off. (Think dandruff dandruff, excessive flaking of skin from the scalp, apparent as dry or greasy diffuse scaling with variable itching. It is the sign of a skin disease, such as seborrhea or a fungal infection. ) In fact, the epidermis sheds one million cells every 40 minutes, or nine pounds worth a year! New cells under this layer constantly replace the lost flakes. A temporary tattoo on the epidermis would just flake off, too.

Instead, a tattooist uses a tattoo gun--a cluster of electrically-powered needles--to inject ink into the skin's middle layer, the dermis dermis: see skin. . The dermis is a network of blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
, hair and nerve cells, sweat glands, and a mesh of protein fibers called collagen, which lends skin its strength. These cells stick with you for life--and so does the tattoo.

PINS AND NEEDLES pins and needles
pl.n.
A tingling sensation felt in a part of the body numbed from lack of circulation.

Idiom:
on pins and needles
In a state of tense anticipation.
 

Tattoo ink, or pigment, starts as a solid powder. The tattooist combines the tiny clumps of pigment with liquid to form a mixture called a suspension. After dipping the needles into the mixture, the tattooist glides the gun along the skin. With every in- and-out motion, the needles shoot tiny pigment clumps into the dermis. After the pigment lodges in the dermis' cells, the tattoo leaves scars so small they're invisible to the eye.

At least that is what's supposed to happen. Tattooist Denise de la Cerda of Brooklyn, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, warns that the tattoo gun can be a dangerous instrument when the wrong hand wields it. If a tattooist presses the gun against the skin, the needles can easily pierce fat or muscle beneath the dermis. "That can cause bad scarring or excessive bleeding," she says. When ink penetrates fat, it can spread to appear like a permanent bruise, warns de la Cerda.

Tattooists are also supposed to sterilize sterilize /ster·i·lize/ (ster´i-liz)
1. to render sterile; to free from microorganisms.

2. to render incapable of reproduction.


ster·il·ize
v.
1.
 their equipment with an autoclave autoclave

Vessel, usually of steel, able to withstand high temperatures and pressures. The chemical industry uses various types of autoclaves in manufacturing dyes and in other chemical reactions requiring high pressures.
 (like a giant pressure-cooker) and use ink poured only for each client. If they don't, any disease carried by bacteria or viruses in the blood--like hepatitis, a liver disease Liver Disease Definition

Liver disease is a general term for any damage that reduces the functioning of the liver.
Description

The liver is a large, solid organ located in the upper right-hand side of the abdomen.
, or HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. , the virus that causes AIDS-- can be transferred from an infected person into the client's bloodstream.

Some people also develop an allergic reaction allergic reaction
n.
A local or generalized reaction of an organism to internal or external contact with a specific allergen to which the organism has been previously sensitized.
 to tattoo ink that can result in a severe rash, which often must be surgically cut out of the skin. Finally, infection can set in if you don't keep the tattooed skin clean. "My tattooist didn't talk to me about safety--he just wanted to get the job done," Jennifer says.

SCARS AND SURGERY

What can you do if you want to get rid of a tattoo? Fourteen-year-old Michael Dietrich from Dundalk, Maryland, had a fist-sized bulldog branded on his chest when he was 13. "I look up to the Marine Corps, and the bulldog is their symbol," he says. But when Michael's mom saw it, she ordered him to have his tattoo removed--and fast.

Michael could have traded his tattoo for a scar. Dr. Rox Anderson, a dermatologist (skin doctor) from Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital Health care The major teaching hospital for Harvard Medical School, widely regarded as one of the best health care centers in the world , has removed unwanted tattoos by cutting out the skin with a scalpel or "sanding" them off with a wire brush. Both methods remove the dermis, which heals, but leave scars as a grim reminder.

Instead, Michael opted for costly (often $2,000-$3,000), painful, but more effective laser therapy that blasts the tattoo ink yet spares the skin.

How? A laser is an intense beam of concentrated light energy. The dark colors of tattoo pigments absorb this energy--much like a black parking lot absorbs heat and light from the sun. Because skin doesn't absorb the light energy as much as the tattoo does, the skin remains unharmed.

When a laser beam strikes a clump of tattoo pigment, the light energy is converted to heat. Heat sizzles the pigment clumps to 300 [degrees] C (572 [degrees] F), breaking them up into tiny particles.

Scientists suspect the pigment particles disappear in two ways: First, cells in your immune system-- the body's defense against foreign invaders--called macrophages Macrophages
White blood cells whose job is to destroy invading microorganisms. Listeria monocytogenes avoids being killed and can multiply within the macrophage.
 gobble 1. gobble - To consume, usually used with "up". "The output spy gobbles characters out of a tty output buffer."
2. gobble - To obtain, usually used with "down". "I guess I'll gobble down a copy of the documentation tomorrow."

See also snarf.
 the tiny particles up.

Scientists also think some of the particles gradually "drain" into the lymph system, a network of tubes containing a clear fluid called lymph, which produces infection-fighting white blood cells White blood cells
A group of several cell types that occur in the bloodstream and are essential for a properly functioning immune system.

Mentioned in: Abscess Incision & Drainage, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Complement Deficiencies
. Tattoo pigment particles may end up settling in the body's lymph nodes, lumps of tissue that filter lymph fluid. "A laser doesn't really make all of the tattoo disappear," says Anderson, who developed laser tattoo removal. "It just shifts where the ink is in the body."

Since the dermis' cells reabsorb reabsorb

to absorb again; to undergo or to subject to reabsorption; to resorb.
 some of the broken-up pigment, one laser treatment isn't enough to completely erase a tattoo, Anderson says. Michael had to endure six more sessions to finally get rid of his bull-dog He was lucky: Usually only 60 to 70 percent of laser patients can get their professional ink design completely removed. Often, certain colors (especially green) or a "ghosted" image of the tattoo lingers forever.

THINK ABOUT IT

Laws banning tattoos for teens are gaining support around the country. Now that you know more facts behind the fad, what do you think?

1. Should tattooing teenagers be illegal?

2. If you got a tattoo today, how would you feel about it 10 years down the line?

3. Do you want a tattoo?

RELATED ARTICLE: GOING...GONE

1. Before laser removal ...

2. ...and after the first treatment. Each 100-nanosecond-long laser light pulse leaves a temporary white mark.

3. Nine treatments later, tattooed spots still linger. These spots soon fade away on their own.

4. Whew whew  
interj.
Used to express strong emotion, such as relief or amazement.


whew
interj

an exclamation of relief, surprise, disbelief, or weariness
! Done. And this teen can still tan.

RELATED ARTICLE: Tattoos for teens--should they be illegal?

As more teens seek out tattoos, more states now ban them for people younger than 18. Most adults agree that tattoos should be illegal for minors, and Jennifer Chowdhury, 20, of New York City, agrees: "You need a certain level of maturity to get a tattoo. Besides, you'll have it for the rest of your life For The Rest Of Your Life is a British game show on ITV, hosted by Nicky Campbell. It is produced by Initial, a company of Endemol. Format
Round One
. Eighteen years really isn't that long to wait:' What do you think?

NO. I think it should be our decision to get one or not. Kids who really want tattoos are not going to be stopped by a law. Besides, if there is a law, that might make more kids want to get one.

Tessa Welsch, 16 Canton, OH

YES. I know if I got a tattoo, by the time I was my dad or mom's age, I probably wouldn't want it anymore. When you're a kid you think they make you look cool, but when you're older you'll probably think they make you look goofy.

William Brown, 13 Sarasota, FL

NO. If kids realize they made a bad decision later on, they can just pay $3,000 and get it lasered off. If they complain about the pain, they should've thought about that in the first place.

Danielle Revels, 12 West Hempstead, NY
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Title Annotation:includes laser removal pictures, and also Q&A on legalizing teen tattoos; tattooist inject ink through into the dermis with a tattoo gun which is a set of electrically-powered needles
Author:Lederberg, Anne
Publication:Science World
Date:Mar 9, 1998
Words:1367
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