Thread: Tanorexia
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Old 11-30-2008, 01:42 AM   #10 (permalink)
Beaners
 
Join Date: Jan 3 2008
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Re: Tanorexia

Quote:
Originally Posted by unity View Post
An article to back that up would be great. Not that I doubt you. But again this lies with those that have addictive personalities.

Anything can be "addictive". But in the context of drugs, alcohol, etc. a person should not feel any withdrawal from tanning.
Here's one article, FYI. I first read about this, actually, in Michael Holick's "UV Advantage," and this has been further reinforced by several other medical articles circulating out there. Enjoy!

MEDICAL EXAMINER

Sunny Daze

Is tanning addictive? Does sunscreen really help prevent skin cancer? And other burning summer questions.
By Amanda Schaffer
Posted Tuesday, Aug. 14, 2007, at 2:51 PM ET
________________________________________

1) Is ultraviolet light addictive?

A fundamental question in sun science is why we go on basking like lizards despite the obvious risks. Researchers have long suspected a connection between UV exposure and natural "feel good" molecules called beta-endorphins, which are also released during exercise. But for years, the evidence was ambiguous, as some scientists looking for it failed to find an endorphin surge in peoples' blood following exposure to ultraviolet light.

Last year, however, the field warmed up, so to speak. Steven Feldman, a dermatologist at Wake Forest University, gave eight frequent tanners a drug called naltrexone, which blocks the body's opioid receptors. These are sites in the body and brain where endorphins, as well as drugs like morphine and codeine, may attach.

Feldman found that on naltrexone, half of the frequent tanners showed signs of withdrawal, like nausea and jitteriness, whereas none of the infrequent tanners did. He argues that with their opioid receptors blocked, the tanners "were deprived of their UV fix," because they'd developed a chemical dependency on the light.

David Fisher of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston thinks there may be an evolutionary rationale for the sun's draw. Maybe the endorphin release offered an adaptive advantage by reducing the pain associated with sunburn, or encouraged people living at high latitudes to spend time in the sun and thus avoid vitamin D deficiency. This spring, Fisher and his colleagues happened on a molecular connection between UV light, tanning, and endorphin release. In a paper published in March in Cell, they reported that UV damage directly causes the production of beta-endorphin in the skin.

No one knows exactly how this endorphin release might trigger chemical dependency—the molecules may or may not reach the bloodstream. But the door is now wide open to molecular sleuthing. Meanwhile, some indoor-tanning fans are also touting the endorphin findings, since it seems to prove chemically that tanning feels terrific (even as it kills you).
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