The art of tattooing has been practiced since the ancient times for a variety of reasons. The descriptive, decorative patterns have not only been used as a means of identification but have established itself in the field of medicine as well, being employed as a therapeutic modality or diagnostic method. These include corneal tattooing, gastrointestinal tattooing during endoscopy, reconstructive and cosmetic tattooing for camouflage, radiotherapy field marking etc. An emerging application of tattooing is medical alert tattooing often practiced by the patients themselves without medical consultation inscribing their disease condition or allergy to a particular medication which may affect diagnosis or treatment. However, tattoos indicating adv...
People have tattooed themselves for thousands of years, and it remains popular with various groups a...
Background: With the increasing popularity in recent years, tattoos are no longer considered taboo b...
Copyright © 2014 Andrea Bassi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...
Tattoos are becoming increasingly common. They have an impact on many aspects of clinician-patient i...
Background: Body art in the form of ornamental tattoos has been prevalent since ages and is followed...
Tattoos are defined as the introduction of exogenous pigments into the dermis in order to produce a ...
The number of tattooed people has substantially increased in the past years. Surveys in different co...
With about 10–20% of the adult population in Europe being tattooed, there is a strong demand for pub...
Tattooing refers to marking of the skin by puncturing and introducing pigmented material. Although i...
Background: The aim of this study was to explore the lived experiences of medical school students an...
Background: Tattoos were historically associated with deviant behaviours or religious and other soci...
Puncturing the skin with a tattoo needle damages the immunological and physical barrier....
The prevalence of tattoos has increased over the past several decades. The societal shift of how tat...
Nearly one third of Americans have a tattoo. Despite lingering stigma against tattooed individuals, ...
AbstractBackground: For thousands of years, and in many places around the world tattoos have been p...
People have tattooed themselves for thousands of years, and it remains popular with various groups a...
Background: With the increasing popularity in recent years, tattoos are no longer considered taboo b...
Copyright © 2014 Andrea Bassi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...
Tattoos are becoming increasingly common. They have an impact on many aspects of clinician-patient i...
Background: Body art in the form of ornamental tattoos has been prevalent since ages and is followed...
Tattoos are defined as the introduction of exogenous pigments into the dermis in order to produce a ...
The number of tattooed people has substantially increased in the past years. Surveys in different co...
With about 10–20% of the adult population in Europe being tattooed, there is a strong demand for pub...
Tattooing refers to marking of the skin by puncturing and introducing pigmented material. Although i...
Background: The aim of this study was to explore the lived experiences of medical school students an...
Background: Tattoos were historically associated with deviant behaviours or religious and other soci...
Puncturing the skin with a tattoo needle damages the immunological and physical barrier....
The prevalence of tattoos has increased over the past several decades. The societal shift of how tat...
Nearly one third of Americans have a tattoo. Despite lingering stigma against tattooed individuals, ...
AbstractBackground: For thousands of years, and in many places around the world tattoos have been p...
People have tattooed themselves for thousands of years, and it remains popular with various groups a...
Background: With the increasing popularity in recent years, tattoos are no longer considered taboo b...
Copyright © 2014 Andrea Bassi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...