Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink. / Sepehri, Mitra; Steen Sejersen, Tobias; Qvortrup, Klaus; Lerche, Catharina M; Serup, Jørgen.

In: Dermatology, Vol. 233, No. 1, 2017, p. 86-93.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sepehri, M, Steen Sejersen, T, Qvortrup, K, Lerche, CM & Serup, J 2017, 'Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink', Dermatology, vol. 233, no. 1, pp. 86-93. https://doi.org/10.1159/000468149

APA

Sepehri, M., Steen Sejersen, T., Qvortrup, K., Lerche, C. M., & Serup, J. (2017). Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink. Dermatology, 233(1), 86-93. https://doi.org/10.1159/000468149

Vancouver

Sepehri M, Steen Sejersen T, Qvortrup K, Lerche CM, Serup J. Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink. Dermatology. 2017;233(1):86-93. https://doi.org/10.1159/000468149

Author

Sepehri, Mitra ; Steen Sejersen, Tobias ; Qvortrup, Klaus ; Lerche, Catharina M ; Serup, Jørgen. / Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink. In: Dermatology. 2017 ; Vol. 233, No. 1. pp. 86-93.

Bibtex

@article{233e96b6bb4d4ddcb86d607ff78b5619,
title = "Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink",
abstract = "AIM: Tattoo pigments are deposited in the skin and known to distribute to regional lymph nodes. Tattoo pigments are small particles and may be hypothesized to reach the blood stream and become distributed to peripheral organs. This has not been studied in the past. The aim of the study was to trace tattoo pigments in internal organs in mice extensively tattooed with 2 different tattoo ink products.MATERIAL/METHODS: Three groups of mice were studied, i.e., 10 tattooed black, 10 tattooed red, and 5 untreated controls. They were tattooed on the entire back with commercial tattoo inks, black and red. Mice were sacrificed after 1 year. Samples were isolated from tattooed skin, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, kidney, and lung. Samples were examined for deposits of tattoo pigments by light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM).RESULTS: TEM identified intracellular tattoo pigments in the skin and in lymph nodes. TEM in both groups of tattooed mice showed tattoo pigment deposits in the Kupffer cells in the liver, which is a new observation. TEM detected no pigment in other internal organs. Light microscopy showed dense pigment in the skin and in lymph nodes but not in internal organs.CONCLUSION: The study demonstrated black and red tattoo pigment deposits in the liver; thus, tattoo pigment distributed from the tattooed skin via the blood stream to this important organ of detoxification. The finding adds a new dimension to tattoo pigment distribution in the body, i.e., as observed via the blood in addition to the lymphatic pathway.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Mitra Sepehri and {Steen Sejersen}, Tobias and Klaus Qvortrup and Lerche, {Catharina M} and J{\o}rgen Serup",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2017 S. Karger AG, Basel.",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1159/000468149",
language = "English",
volume = "233",
pages = "86--93",
journal = "Dermatology",
issn = "1018-8665",
publisher = "S Karger AG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tattoo Pigments Are Observed in the Kupffer Cells of the Liver Indicating Blood-Borne Distribution of Tattoo Ink

AU - Sepehri, Mitra

AU - Steen Sejersen, Tobias

AU - Qvortrup, Klaus

AU - Lerche, Catharina M

AU - Serup, Jørgen

N1 - © 2017 S. Karger AG, Basel.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - AIM: Tattoo pigments are deposited in the skin and known to distribute to regional lymph nodes. Tattoo pigments are small particles and may be hypothesized to reach the blood stream and become distributed to peripheral organs. This has not been studied in the past. The aim of the study was to trace tattoo pigments in internal organs in mice extensively tattooed with 2 different tattoo ink products.MATERIAL/METHODS: Three groups of mice were studied, i.e., 10 tattooed black, 10 tattooed red, and 5 untreated controls. They were tattooed on the entire back with commercial tattoo inks, black and red. Mice were sacrificed after 1 year. Samples were isolated from tattooed skin, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, kidney, and lung. Samples were examined for deposits of tattoo pigments by light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM).RESULTS: TEM identified intracellular tattoo pigments in the skin and in lymph nodes. TEM in both groups of tattooed mice showed tattoo pigment deposits in the Kupffer cells in the liver, which is a new observation. TEM detected no pigment in other internal organs. Light microscopy showed dense pigment in the skin and in lymph nodes but not in internal organs.CONCLUSION: The study demonstrated black and red tattoo pigment deposits in the liver; thus, tattoo pigment distributed from the tattooed skin via the blood stream to this important organ of detoxification. The finding adds a new dimension to tattoo pigment distribution in the body, i.e., as observed via the blood in addition to the lymphatic pathway.

AB - AIM: Tattoo pigments are deposited in the skin and known to distribute to regional lymph nodes. Tattoo pigments are small particles and may be hypothesized to reach the blood stream and become distributed to peripheral organs. This has not been studied in the past. The aim of the study was to trace tattoo pigments in internal organs in mice extensively tattooed with 2 different tattoo ink products.MATERIAL/METHODS: Three groups of mice were studied, i.e., 10 tattooed black, 10 tattooed red, and 5 untreated controls. They were tattooed on the entire back with commercial tattoo inks, black and red. Mice were sacrificed after 1 year. Samples were isolated from tattooed skin, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, kidney, and lung. Samples were examined for deposits of tattoo pigments by light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM).RESULTS: TEM identified intracellular tattoo pigments in the skin and in lymph nodes. TEM in both groups of tattooed mice showed tattoo pigment deposits in the Kupffer cells in the liver, which is a new observation. TEM detected no pigment in other internal organs. Light microscopy showed dense pigment in the skin and in lymph nodes but not in internal organs.CONCLUSION: The study demonstrated black and red tattoo pigment deposits in the liver; thus, tattoo pigment distributed from the tattooed skin via the blood stream to this important organ of detoxification. The finding adds a new dimension to tattoo pigment distribution in the body, i.e., as observed via the blood in addition to the lymphatic pathway.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1159/000468149

DO - 10.1159/000468149

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28486229

VL - 233

SP - 86

EP - 93

JO - Dermatology

JF - Dermatology

SN - 1018-8665

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 178790695