Literature DB >> 20648713

The physiological and phenotypic determinants of human tanning measured as change in skin colour following a single dose of ultraviolet B radiation.

Terence H Wong1, Ian J Jackson, Jonathan L Rees.   

Abstract

Experimental study of the in vivo kinetics of tanning in human skin has been limited by the difficulties in measuring changes in melanin pigmentation independent of the ultravioletinduced changes in erythema. The present study attempted to experimentally circumvent this issue. We have studied erythemal and tanning responses following a single exposure to a range of doses of ultraviolet B irradiation on the buttock and the lower back in 98 subjects. Erythema was assessed using reflectance techniques at 24 h and tanning measured as the L* spectrophotometric score at 7 days following noradrenaline iontophoresis. We show that dose (P < 0.0001), body site (P < 0.0001), skin colour (P < 0.0001), ancestry (P = 0.0074), phototype (P = 0.0019) and sex (P = 0.04) are all independent predictors of erythema. Quantitative estimates of the effects of these variables are reported, but the effects of ancestry and phototype do not appear solely explainable in terms of L* score. Dose (P < 0.0001), body site (P < 0.0001) and skin colour (P = 0.0365) or, as an alternative to skin colour, skin type (P = 0.0193) predict tanning, with those with lighter skin tanning slightly more to a defined UVB dose. If erythema is factored into the regression, then only dose and body site remain significant predictors of tanning: therefore neither phototype nor pigmentary factors, such as baseline skin colour, or eye or hair colour, predict change in skin colour to a unit erythemal response.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20648713     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0625.2010.01078.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Dermatol        ISSN: 0906-6705            Impact factor:   3.960


  3 in total

1.  Non-invasive diffuse reflectance measurements of cutaneous melanin content can predict human sensitivity to ultraviolet radiation.

Authors:  Sergio G Coelho; Barbara Z Zmudzka; Lanlan Yin; Sharon A Miller; Yuji Yamaguchi; Taketsugu Tadokoro; Vincent J Hearing; Janusz Z Beer
Journal:  Exp Dermatol       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 3.960

2.  PGC-1 coactivators regulate MITF and the tanning response.

Authors:  Jonathan Shoag; Rizwan Haq; Mingfeng Zhang; Laura Liu; Glenn C Rowe; Aihua Jiang; Nicole Koulisis; Caitlin Farrel; Christopher I Amos; Qingyi Wei; Jeffrey E Lee; Jiangwen Zhang; Thomas S Kupper; Abrar A Qureshi; Rutao Cui; Jiali Han; David E Fisher; Zoltan Arany
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2012-11-29       Impact factor: 17.970

3.  Melanocortin-1 receptor, skin cancer and phenotypic characteristics (M-SKIP) project: study design and methods for pooling results of genetic epidemiological studies.

Authors:  Sara Raimondi; Sara Gandini; Maria Concetta Fargnoli; Vincenzo Bagnardi; Patrick Maisonneuve; Claudia Specchia; Rajiv Kumar; Eduardo Nagore; Jiali Han; Johan Hansson; Peter A Kanetsky; Paola Ghiorzo; Nelleke A Gruis; Terry Dwyer; Leigh Blizzard; Ricardo Fernandez-de-Misa; Wojciech Branicki; Tadeusz Debniak; Niels Morling; Maria Teresa Landi; Giuseppe Palmieri; Gloria Ribas; Alexander Stratigos; Lynn Cornelius; Tomonori Motokawa; Sumiko Anno; Per Helsing; Terence H Wong; Philippe Autier; José C García-Borrón; Julian Little; Julia Newton-Bishop; Francesco Sera; Fan Liu; Manfred Kayser; Tamar Nijsten
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2012-08-03       Impact factor: 4.615

  3 in total

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