| Literature DB >> 28400706 |
Gianfranco Calogiuri1, Elisabetta Di Leo2, Lavjay Butani3, Stefano Pizzimenti4, Cristoforo Incorvaia5, Luigi Macchia6, Eustachio Nettis6.
Abstract
Hypersensitivity to para-phenylenediamine (PPD) and related compounds induced by temporary black henna tattoos has become a serious health problem worldwide. Different patterns of sensitization with various clinical aspects are described in literature due to PPD associated to henna tattoo and these manifestations are likely correlated with the immunological and dermatological pathomechanisms involved. Henna is the Persian name of the plant Lawsonia inermis, Fam. Lythraceae. It is a woody shrub that grow in regions of North Africa, South Asia, India and Sri Lanka. Nowadays it is rather frequent to see temporary "tattoos" performed with henna. To make tattoos darker and long-lasting PPD has been associated to henna in tattoo drawings mixtures, so obtaining "black henna". In these years there has been a rise of contact sensitization to PPD and in medical literature an increased number of cases have been reported on temporary henna tattoo application. Here we review the various clinical patterns related to PPD and henna tattoo, to investigate the possible link between clinic-morphological pictures and the immunological response to PPD and henna. The literature underlines that different clinical manifestations are related to black henna containing PPD, and its derivative products may cause delayed-type as well as immediate-type reactions. Further studies are needed to investigate the relationship between clinical and morphological aspects of PPD contact dermatitis and the T cell subsets predominance.Entities:
Keywords: Allergy; Black henna; Contact dermatitis; Henna tattoo; Para-phenylenediamine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28400706 PMCID: PMC5385600 DOI: 10.1186/s12948-017-0063-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Mol Allergy ISSN: 1476-7961
Reactions to black henna tattoo: main clinical manifestations and time to onset after the application
| Clinical manifestation | Time to onset | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Eczematous contact dermatitis | 1–2 days | [ |
| Lichenoid eruptions | 1–2 weeks | [ |
| Contact urticaria and angioneurotic oedema | Few hours–2 days | [ |
| Contact anaphylaxis | Few hours | [ |
| Lymphomatoid reactions | Few hours–few days | [ |
| Vesicular-bullous lesions | 1–4 days | [ |
| Erythema multiforme like eruptions | 2–14 days | [ |
| Sweet syndrome | 3 days | [ |
| Wells syndrome | 3 days | [ |
| Prurigo nodularis | 3 months | [ |
| Connubial contact dermatitis | Few days | [ |