INKED UP

I’m a scientist – here’s what tattoos really do to your body and how they can be deadly

NOWADAYS tattoos are pretty common place.

It's easy to walk into a tattoo parlour to get a little scribble on your arm or back.

Advertisement
As your skin is your immune system's first barrier, your body considers a tattooing an assault

But did you know that getting one can trigger a whole immune response in your body?

And that it could influence how your body responds to infection threats?

Scientists explained how your body reacts to getting inked - and when a tattoo-induced infection can be deadly.

What happens to your body when you're tattooed?

When a tattoo needle stamps a pattern into your skin, the body considers it an assault.

Advertisement

This is because your skin acts as the immune system’s 'first barrier', Juliet Morrison, a virologist at UC Riverside told .

Your skin is packed with fast-acting defensive cells that can leap into action when it’s breached by something like a tattoo gun, she continued.

Their role is to detect anything foreign and destroy it so the healing process can begin - and in the cases of burns, cuts and grazes, this works pretty well.

But your body's healing mechanism changes when ink is involved.

Advertisement

Most read in Health

NOT COOL
The 3 major health risks of not turning your heating on - plus tips to stay warm
'BLOWN AWAY'
I got my first erection in 27 years watching Lady Chatterley's Lover
HOLIDAY HELL
My girl woke up 'yellow' & vomiting as 15 of my family fell sick on 5* holiday
MUG OFF
Over-the-counter cold & flu remedies 'do NOT work & should be pulled from shelves'

Particles in pigments are bulky and difficult for an immune cell’s enzymes to break down.

So when your immune cells try to process ink, they can't digest it as they usually would.

Instead, they transform it into a microscopic version of gum, making it visible at the surface of your skin.

Does ink affect your immune system?

Scientists aren't sure about this.

Advertisement