Hair Dye Increases Risk of Cancer?
Ever wonder what the price of vanity is in the modern time? Ever-changing era in which we live may be even higher than we can imagine. A study publish that warns men and women that using hair dye more than nine times a year increases by 60% the risk of developing chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, which is a form of cancer of the blood cells. The same study claims that women who dye their hair in darker shades of black, brown and red are 50% more likely to develop a different type of blood cancer, namely follicular lymphoma. The theory is that dark shades pose more risk to our health because they come with an increased chemical input. So, what are we to do? Should we take this study seriously and stop dyeing our hair?
When you color your hair, around 90 per cent of the dye sticks to your head. It’s inevitable that some of the dye will be absorbed by the skin. These compounds are then broken down in the body and passed out through the urine. However, specialists advise women not to panic, assuring us that things are much better now than they used to be 20 years ago, when hair dyes used to contain much more dangerous chemicals that have been banned from the market in the meantime. If that comes as little comfort for you, another option is to give up coloring your hair altogether and opt for highlights or lowlights, which are much safer.
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