The Tattoo Eraser
A new type of body art ink promises freedom from forever
By Eric Jaffe
Smithsonian.com, January 01, 2007
Like jumbo shrimp or freezer burn, tattoo removal is a somewhat contradictory concept. From a purist's standpoint, a tattoo's permanence reflects the eternity of its subject: a guiding philosophy, the memory of a departed, one's love for mom. More practically, body art is plain hard to remove; throughout thousands of years of tattoo tradition, the perfect eraser has remained elusive.
Until now. A company called Freedom-
"The main problem we have with removing tattoos is you can't predict what the outcome's
going to be," says Dr. Rox Anderson, a dermatologist at Harvard Medical School who
co-
Ancient forms of tattoo removal included primitive dermabrasion—scraping the skin with rough surfaces, such as sandpaper. Romans used such a method as early as the first century, when soldiers returned from exotic regions with taboo markings.
Modern laser tattoo removal is credited to University of Cincinnati dermatologist Leon Goldman, who unveiled his method in the late 1960s. Goldman's laser assaulted the tattooed skin with "hot vapor bursts" that left it charred, Time magazine described on Oct. 20, 1967. Even at its best, the process left behind "cosmetically acceptable scars."
In the late 1980s, Anderson improved Goldman's procedure, creating a laser system
that removed a tattoo, scar and all. But even Anderson's method worked only three-
Enter Freedom-
"I realized it's better to work on the ink than on the laser," Anderson says. "This is the first time a tattoo ink has actually been designed from a biological and material science point of view."
Typical tattoo inks are not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. While
some are made safely from carbon or iron oxide, others, particularly yellow compounds,
contain carcinogens. The ink rests in tiny beads that remain lodged in the skin after
a tattoo is applied. During removal, a laser blasts these nano-
Freedom-
"We're helping to change and make safe once again the art form of tattooing," says Martin Schmieg, the company's chief executive.
Freedom-
The new ink will also entice anyone too apprehensive to get inked in the first place, Schmieg predicts.
"The number one reason people don't get a tattoo is permanence," he says. "When you remove that issue, we believe there will be a natural growth in the number of people getting tattoos."
The scientists are also designing polymer shells that biodegrade on their own, without
a laser's nudge, over a matter of months, says Edith Mathiowitz of Brown University,
who engineered Freedom-
"This could be a new type of jewelry," Mathiowitz says.
If Freedom-
"This is about greatly reducing the risk of getting a tattoo," he says.
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