Flash Your Tattoo Home Page >>> FAQ >>> Tattoo Health Risks
Because it
requires breaking the skin barrier, tattooing may carry health risks,
including infection and allergic reactions. In the United States, for
example, the Red Cross prohibits a person who has received a tattoo from
donating blood for 12 months (FDA 2000), unless the procedure was done in a
state-regulated and licensed studio, using sterile technique.[4]. Not all
states have a licensing program, meaning that people who receive tattoos in
those states are subject to the 12-month deferral regardless of the hygienic
standards of the studio. Similarly, the UK does not provide certification
for tattooists, and so there is a six month waiting period without
exception.[9]
Modern western tattooers reduce such risks by following universal
precautions, working with single-use items, and sterilizing their equipment
after each use. Many jurisdictions require that tattooists have bloodborne
pathogen training, such as is provided through the Red Cross and OSHA.
[nfection
Since tattoo instruments come in contact with blood and bodily fluids,
diseases may be transmitted if the instruments are used on more than one
person without being sterilized. However, infection from tattooing in clean
and modern tattoo studios employing single-use needles is rare. In amateur
tattoos, such as those applied in prisons, however, there is an elevated
risk of infection. To address this problem, a program was introduced in
Canada as of the summer of 2005 that provides legal tattooing in prisons,
both to reduce health risks and to provide inmates with a marketable skill.
Inmates were to be trained to staff and operate the tattoo parlors once six
of them opened successfully.[2]
Infections that could be transmitted via the use of unsterilized tattoo
equipment include surface infections of the skin, herpes simplex virus,
tetanus, staph (Infected Tattoo), fungal infections, some forms of
hepatitis, and HIV. No person in the United States is reported to have
contracted HIV via a commercially-applied tattooing process.[citation
needed] Washington state's OSHA studies have suggested that since the
needles used in tattooing are not hollow, in the case of a needle stick
injury the amount of fluids transmitted may be small enough that HIV would
be difficult to transmit. Tetanus risk is prevented by having an up-to-date
tetanus booster prior to being tattooed. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention states that no data exist in the United States indicating that
persons with exposures to tattooing alone are at increased risk for HCV
infection. In 2006, the CDC reported 3 clusters with 44 cases of methicillin-resistant
staph infection traced to unlicensed tattooists (MMWR 55(24)). One should
not consume alcohol directly before or after getting a tattoo. Not only does
it weaken the body’s ability to deal with physical stress, alcohol thins the
blood, causing more bleeding during the procedure and less ink to be
absorbed.
Allergic reactions
Perhaps due to the mechanism whereby the skin's immune system encapsulates
pigment particles in fibrous tissue, tattoo inks have been described as
"remarkably nonreactive histologically".[6]
Allergic reactions to tattoo pigments are uncommon except for certain brands
of red and green. People who are sensitive or allergic to certain metals may
react to pigments in the skin with swelling and/or itching, and/or oozing of
clear fluid called sebum. Such reactions are quite rare, however, and some
artists will recommend performing a test patch.
For those who are allergic to latex, many artists are using non-latex or
will use non-latex gloves if asked.
There is also a small risk of anaphylactic shock (hypersensitive reaction)
in those who are susceptible, but the chance of a health risk is small.
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