Site icon CureJoy

Everything You Need To Know About Sunless Tanning

Summer’s soon going to be at our doorstep in all it’s sunny glory. Which means you’re going to be eyeing that much-coveted sun-kissed glow, without necessarily exposing yourself to too many long hours under the sun. Which is just as well, because you don’t want to accidentally end up developing some sort of skin cancer!

Consider upgrading your tanning routine with the help of sunless tanning products. They promise you that lovely poolside glow sans the painful sunburns or the damaging impact of those super harsh ultraviolet rays. Here’s what you need to know about these summertime miracles.

Advertisements

What Are Sunless Tanning Products?

With the American Academy of Dermatology estimating that one in five Americans will most likely develop skin cancer at some point in their life, more and more people are turning to sunless tanning (also known as self-tanning) products. 1

Advertisements

These products come in different forms such as lotions, gels, sprays, creams, pills, and bronzers. Depending on which type you choose, you can smooth, swipe, or spray on a tan whose color can range from a light bronze to a darker golden-brown hue. Most of these start taking effect within 45 minutes to an hour once you factor in the drying time and you could be looking at enjoying a completely natural-looking sunless tan for a good couple of days.

How Do Sunless Tanning Products Work?

Advertisements

Dermatologists claim that the most effective sunless tanning products are the ones that contain the color additive dihydroxyacetone (DHA) as the main active ingredient.

DHA is a colorless sugar that reacts with the dead cells on the surface of the skin. Upon interaction, DHA causes the color of these cells to darken which results in a tan. However, this tan is only temporary. This is because each day, your skin sheds millions of dead skin cells, giving you an entirely new epidermis every 35 to 45 days. So as these dead skin cells wear away, so will your tan.

Advertisements

The color change typically lasts about five to seven days from the time of application. This is why so many of these sunless tanning products instruct frequent reapplications every three days to maintain that tan.

Sunless Tanning Accelerators

Tanning accelerators are typically lotions or pills that contain an amino acid called tyrosine. These products basically claim to work like the sun does, that is stimulating and boosting the formation of melanin, thereby accelerating the tanning process (more melanin equals more tanning). However, there is no research to confirm these claims at the moment.

Advertisements

Bronzers

Bronzers, available in the form of powders and moisturizers are another popularly used form of sunless tanning. Once applied, they can easily be washed away with soap and water. Therefore, this is not the best form of sunless tanning to opt for if you’re going to be swimming.

Sunless Tanning Pills

Tanning pills are another sunless-tanning product. These contain canthaxanthin, a commonly used color additive in certain foods. While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approves the use of canthaxanthin in food, it doesn’t completely agree with its use as a tanning agent.

Advertisements

This is because when used as a color additive in foods, only small amounts of canthaxanthin are required which are safe for consumption. However, tanning products call for larger quantities of this color additive. If accidentally consumed, it can end up being deposited all over your body, including in the layers of your skin, eventually causing it to turn orange-brown in color. In fact, tanning pills are linked to a variety of side effects such as hives, hepatitis and canthaxanthin retinopathy – a condition where yellow deposits form in the retina of the eye.2

Do Sunless Tanning Products Offer Sun Protection?

Advertisements

No, they don’t.

Most sunless tanning products don’t contain sunscreen because if they did, they would only be effective for a couple of hours. Therefore, if you’ve applied a sunless tanning product and are planning to spend a considerable amount of time in the sun, you will definitely need to apply a sunscreen as well.

Are Sunless Tanning Products Safe?

According to the FDA, sunless tanning products that contain DHA are safe to use as long as they are limited to “external application” only. The Code of Federal Regulations defines “externally applied” cosmetics as those that are “applied only to external parts of the body and not to the lips or any body surface covered by mucous membrane.”3

Because the internal risks of DHA are unknown, experts warn people using sunless tanning products against inhaling or applying DHA to areas that are covered by mucous membranes such as the areas around the eyes, the nose, or the lips.

This is also why the use of DHA in “spray-tan” booths is not FDA-approved because the process of “misting” increases the risks of DHA-exposure to the internal mucous membranes.

Precautions To Take While Self-Tanning

If you’re opting for a self-tan at home with the help of DHA-contained products, read and follow the instructions carefully. Be extra careful to not get the product in your eyes, nose, or mouth.

If you’re going to a spray-tan booth, ask the staff about how your eyes, lips, nose, and ears will be protected from the process of “misting” and whether you will be protected from inhaling the tanning spray. Many booths should give you goggles, nose plugs or nose filters, and lip balm to protect yourself before you step into the booth.

Helpful Tips When Applying A Self-Tanning Product

 

Keep these tips in mind to score yourself a faux sunny glow and fend off those haphazard ugly orange patches.

References[+]

References
1 Skin cancer. American Academy of Dermatology.
2 Tanning Pills. U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
3 Sunless Tanners & Bronzers. U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Exit mobile version