Why researchers studying a possible link between tattoos and lymphoma?

Lymphoma is a type of cancer that starts in the lymphatic system, a network of vessels and lymph nodes that twines throughout the body. With about 90,000 newly diagnosed cases a year, lymphoma is one of the most common types of cancer.
Risk factors for it include:
- advancing age
- certain infections (such as Epstein-Barr virus, HIV, and hepatitis C)
- exposure to certain chemicals (such as benzene, or possibly pesticides)
- family history of lymphoma
- exposure to radiation (such as nuclear reactor accidents or after radiation therapy)
- having an impaired immune system
- certain immune diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren’s disease, or celiac disease).
Tattoos are not known to be a cause or risk factor for lymphoma. But there are several reasons to wonder if there might be a connection:
- Ink injected under the skin to create a tattoo contains several chemicals classified as carcinogenic (cancer causing).
- Pigment from tattoo ink can be found in enlarged lymph nodes within weeks of getting a tattoo.
- Immune cells in the skin can react to the chemicals in tattoo ink and travel to nearby lymph nodes, triggering a bodywide immune reaction.
- Other triggers of lymphoma, such as pesticides, have a similar effect on immune cells in lymph nodes.
Is there a connection between tattoos and lymphoma?
Any potential connection between แทงบอล UFABET ราคาดีที่สุด ไม่มีขั้นต่ำ tattoos and lymphoma has not been well studied. I could find only two published studies exploring the possibility, and neither found evidence of a compelling link.
Who did not have lymphoma. The researchers found no significant difference in the frequency of tattoos between the two groups.
The one that triggered the scary headlines above was larger. It compared 1,398 people ages 20 to 60 who had lymphoma with 4,193 people who did not have lymphoma but who were otherwise similar. The study found that
- lymphoma was 21% more common among those with tattoos
- lymphoma risk varied depending on how much time had passed since getting the tattoo:
- within two years, lymphoma risk was 81% higher
- between three and 10 years, no definite increased lymphoma risk was detected
- 11 or more years after getting a tattoo, lymphoma risk was 19%