Due to personal preferences or need, many people resort to indoor or sun tanning. Sometimes, the process of tanning leads to some side effects, white spots (Tinea versicolor) being among the most common ones. Various factors can trigger white spots on skin. Some of them are:
Pressure points
The indoor tanning lotions promote blood circulation to the skin, which helps in carrying more melanin to the epidermis, thereby increasing skin tan. When you lie in a tanning bed, your body position entails some areas being in constant contact with the bed and subject to more pressure than other areas. This pressure due to body weight reduces the flow of blood in those regions. Melanin action
On the account of a genetic disorder, Idiopathic Guttate Hypomelanosis, the epidermal layer partially fails to produce melanin. Therefore, there are some patches or spots on the skin, which are affected so. Artificial tanning procedures also fail to stimulate pigmentation in these areas and they begin to appear white more prominently due to the increased tan of the neighboring area. So far, no cure could be found for this syndrome. Fungus
Sometimes an innocuous fungal growth, due to heat, humidity, and resultant sweating also becomes a factor in creating white spots from tanning. The simple explanation is that such fungal growth prevents light from entering the affected area and minimizes or prevents pigmentation.
Prescription drugs
Some medicines, such as antibiotics (especially tetracycline), hormone replacement drugs (especially birth control pills), and certain strong prescription drugs can adversely affect, a condition called the photo sensitivity of skin. This leads to uneven pigmentation, freckled appearance, and white spots from tanning.
Except for some kinds of genetic disorder, the problem of developing white spots from tanning can successfully be addressed. You can consider the following options, depending upon the cause of such reaction:
Medical help
Do not shy away from medical help or ignore white spots from tanning as trivial. For a correct diagnosis, a thorough medical checkup is necessary, as the white spots can well be the indications of other more complex problems, or the tanning side effects of serious nature.
Changing position
It is advisable to change body posture occasionally, when you lie in a tanning bed. Try to expose the different sides of the body during one tanning session. Use of a sunless tanning spray can also help in this situation, as it does not require a tanning bed and eliminates the possibility of uneven pressure.
Treatment for fungus
The regular, non-infectious type of fungus, usually, has various remedies, such as herbal extracts, ointments, therapeutic toiletries, and oral medication.
Precaution
If you are prescribed some medication and are regular on skin tanning, do let your doctor know about it and understand any possible interference of the drugs.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
How to Prevent White Spots While Tanning
Monday, June 22, 2009
Would it be okay to go to a tanning salon when having stretch marks?
For this the answer is a very simple 'Yes', 'No', 'Maybe'. We may not sound firm, but that is because the exercise of 'erasing' the stretch marks by tanning is a total trial and error choice. So if you have the intent of visiting a tanning salon with the question 'is it okay to go in with stretch marks?', our answer too remains vaguely firm on the intent, but a very firm 'no' on the ultimate outcome. To site our conviction, let us state that neither lying in the hot sun or in a covered tanning salon will help in covering the scars, and let us not be mistaken about stretch marks not being scars.
Let us be clear that the stretch mark will be less prone to catching the tan, whether from the open sunlight or from a monitored UV Ray exposure. The end result would be that your overall skin would become a shade darker, with the possibility that the stretch marks would even stand out further. The alternate is that the stretch marks would grab some of the tan, not as much as the normal skin, so technically we would be back to square one on the end objective. Sometimes, the marks do get a tanned blend but for a limited time, and when the skin does away with the tan, the stretch marks are not able to shrug-off the tan, and hence appear even darker.
But why are we posing the question 'would it be okay to go to a tanning salon having stretch marks?' presuming that a woman would want to go only with the sole intent of covering them with a balanced tan. If the stretch marks are an embarrassment and need to be 'disguised', then by all means use a self-tanning lotion or spray, or you could visit a 'spray tan' salon where the tan is air-brushed by a trained professional for a more even coverage. This can give you the summery tanned look, but only temporarily. However, the procedure is quite safe, and workable. A woman with stretch marks can visit a tanning salon with the intention of obtaining a glowing tan in the visible areas of the body, and exercise some precaution of covering the scarred area with a towel. After all, when you visit a tanning salon with stretch marks, the idea and purpose is for the benefit of coming out with a glowing look, minus any complication in the hidden areas.
Save On Tans offers discount tanning prices at Scottsdale Tanning Salons