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Audio update: The cold case of the Girl with the Scorpion Tattoo; a drug bust in Midland Beach; an attempted robbery at a bus stop; and more Published: May. 28, 2025, 5:20 a.m.
A new study found long-term exposure to tattoo ink could increase your risk of cancer. The findings come as up to one in three young adults are believed to have a permanent tattoo of some sort ...
When the tattoo ink accumulates in the lymph nodes, it can trigger chronic inflammation. Researchers say that over time this can lead to abnormal cell growth and increase the risk of cancer.
Key Takeaways Tattoos might increase a person’s risk of cancerTwins with tattoos were more likely to get skin cancer and lymphomaLarger tattoos posed higher risk THURSDAY, March 6, 2025 ...
Tattoos appear to increase a person’s risk of skin cancer between 33% and 62%, according to a new Danish study in the journal BMC Health.
The study observed how tattoo ink can travel through bloodstream, leading to inflammation and abnormal cell growth.
This has to be in the scorpion kick family, given that Ovalle replicates the scorpion movement with her legs — curling them back towards her head like a scorpion tail.
When tattoo ink enters your skin, your body recognizes it as foreign, says dermatologist Dr. Lauren Moy. That causes the body to recruit immune cells to the area.
Now that the Leader and Betty Brant are back in the MCU years later, we want to see these other characters return, too.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man reaches the halfway point of the season with the fifth episode. What is Otto Octavius’ grand plan? How will things change now that Harry knows Peter is Spider-Man ...
Shame Coming Out of the Shadows of Our Worst Mistakes Learning to live with and grow from mistakes, even the harshest ones. Posted December 10, 2024 | Reviewed by Monica Vilhauer Ph.D.
A secret adoption, a grisly murder, and a 30-year mystery: Timeline of Staten Island ‘scorpion’ cold case Holding out hope for a cold-case miracle: Detectives, kin try to learn missing ...