Home
Homepage Forums Advertise with Us Arcade Gallery Register Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Go Back   TanToday - Helping Salon Owners, One At A Time, Since 2000! > EDUCATION and SALON OPERATOR TRAINING > Science of UV

Visit Our Sponsors!

Science of UV Technical regulatory issues and explanations, medical and dermotology information.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 7th December 2005, 12:34 PM   #1 (permalink)
Hall of Famer
 
Editor-in-Chief's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Virtual Reality
Posts: 2,429
Post Study: Stress Raises Skin Cancer Risk



Study: Stress Raises Skin Cancer Risk

Tuesday, December 06, 2005



Stress plus the sun’s damaging rays could raise the odds of skin cancer.

That’s what researchers report in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

They exposed stressed and nonstressed mice to harmful UVB rays. The stressed mice developed skin cancer more quickly and showed weaker immune systems.

“Our results show that a moderate chronic stressor, one that does not … change body and organ weights, can substantially increase susceptibility to cancer,” write Firdaus Dhabhar, PhD, and colleagues.

Dhabhar works at Ohio State University in the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health, Dentistry, and the Institute of Behavioral Medicine Research.

Stress, Sunlight Common

Stress and sunlight are part of daily life for many people, the researchers write. They add that both can be beneficial in moderation and harmful in excess over the long run.

To study stress, sunlight, and skin cancer, they first exposed hairless female mice to UVB light from sun lamps three times a week for 10 weeks.

Next, they put some of the mice under stress. Those mice were restrained in their cages for six hours daily for three weeks, roughly midway through the experiment. The restrained mice were given adequate ventilation and their bodies were not compressed.

The stress was largely psychological, since mice don’t like being confined, the researchers note.

The mice were monitored for about eight months. For comparison, another group of mice wasn’t stressed or exposed to UVB light.

Stressed Mice Got Skin Cancer Faster

Repeated exposure to UVB light prompted skin cancer in the mice, as expected.

Skin cancer showed up sooner in the stressed mice. The blood of those mice also had lower levels of the immune system’s protective agents, such as T-cells and certain chemicals.

The genes that produce those protective chemicals were also suppressed in the stressed animals, according to the study.

The researchers write that stress may have hampered the mice’s immune systems, increasing vulnerability to cancer-causing UVB exposure. They call for more studies to check their results.

Stress Not Solely to Blame

Stress wasn’t tested by itself, so it’s not single-handedly being blamed for skin cancer. The mice were all exposed to light that’s known to cause skin cancer.

However, the chronic stress was only given for a relatively brief time (21 days). The increased odds of skin cancer in the stressed mice emerged several months later.

They say the findings are the first of their kind and could be important for other conditions affected by chronic stress.





By Miranda Hitti, reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

SOURCES: Saul, A. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Dec. 7, 2005; vol 97: pp 1760-1767. News release, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.



Source
Editor-in-Chief is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7th December 2005, 09:39 PM   #2 (permalink)
Moderator
 
frankie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Casino .com
Posts: 3,671
Send a message via AIM to frankie Send a message via Yahoo to frankie
Default Re: Study: Stress Raises Skin Cancer Risk

Stress huh? I should already be gone then. I didn`t know when I opened my first tanning salon I was putting my body at risk for cancer.
__________________




Tel: 706.207.1000 mri.burrell@gmail.com
frankie is online now   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:18 PM.
 
Copyright © 2008 by Virgo Publishing LLC, all rights reserved.
P.O. Box 40079, Phoenix, AZ 85067-0079
Phone: 480-990-1101 - Email: admin@tantoday.com
Privacy statement Terms of use