TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

UV-emitting nail polish dryers damage DNA and cause mutations in cells

30 pointsby zachruss92over 2 years ago

3 comments

aeadioover 2 years ago
I’m no expert here at all, but I wonder how much this translates to real world risk. It seems like they’re irradiating unprotected cells with a direct blast of UV. How much of that UV actually penetrates the top layers of skin? They’re also subjecting cells to 20+ minutes of continuous exposure, while during a gel manicure typically involves 60-120 seconds of exposure. Obviously we’re not seeing individuals walk out of manicure sessions with necrosis of the fingertips. Their values of 20-70% cell death don’t seem meaningfully representative.<p>I’d love somebody with an informed opinion to weigh in here. Is this bad science? Bad reporting? Or is there genuine danger here that’s been flying under the radar?<p>My concern is, we see a lot of sensational science reporting that plays up the risks and dangers of potentially routine things, lowering public trust in science.
评论 #34447718 未加载
评论 #34450384 未加载
LarryMullinsover 2 years ago
The beauty industry is one of the most reckless and and capriciously hazardous consumer-facing industries there is. Online retailers are filled with insanely dangerous beauty products, like high power lasers that don&#x27;t even come with safety googles. Many of their chemical products are unproven at best, often outright hazardous to use at all without a fume hood. Parasites and synthetic stimulants sold as weight loss products, the list goes on and on.
评论 #34448124 未加载
TiredGuyover 2 years ago
How much damage does it do compared to, say, sitting in the summer sun for 20 minutes?<p>Also makes me curious about those UV teeth-whitening devices and whether there is any similar research for them. I don&#x27;t know how valid such a concern would be, but it seems reasonable to assume that the skin inside the mouth wasn&#x27;t designed to be exposed to UV as much as skin on the outside of the body, so I wonder if it&#x27;s more susceptible to damage from that type of thing.
评论 #34445122 未加载
评论 #34445306 未加载
评论 #34445149 未加载
评论 #34445703 未加载