Here is another reason to search some SPF this summer, especially if you are planning to leave it all.
Jenna Bush Hager revealed this week that a trip to a topless beach in Spain during high school was so devastated, the chest turned green.
“If you are burned, it is not beautiful,” he said in the episode of actress Bibb, the 43-year-old co-presenter “today with Jenna & Friends.”
When Bibb, 51, asked if his chest peeled, Bush Hage nod, but then he took things on a strange turn.
“Maybe they have become green,” said the television personality. “The opposite of the color wheel!”
“They turned green? Are you for real life?” Lotus White star crushed.
“Oh, I don’t think it’s good,” Bibb added, and probably be right.
Solar burns occur when you are exposed to too many ultraviolet light (UV), which can penetrate deep layers of the skin and cause cell damage, according to the Mayo clinic.
The body responds by increasing the blood flow to the area, giving rise to the inflamed skin that we know as a burning.
“The signs that their burns are significant include painful, peeled and blistering redness,” said Dr. Lauren Taglia, a dermatologist, in Northwestern Medicine.
In the case of Bush Hag, his Elphaba-Esque chest may have pointed out something more serious under the surface.
“When the skin barrier is significantly damaged by a sunburn, it is possible to develop a secondary bacterial infection,” Dr. Adarsh Vijay Mudgil, medical director of Mudgil Dermatology, told the post.
Mudgil did not personally deal with Bush Hager, but speculated that his symptoms could be caused by an impetigo, a common and contagious infection in the bacterial skin.
“This can lead to the formation of green yellowish bark, which would explain the green color he described,” Mudgil explained.
“ImTigo can be painful and require antibiotics for treatment, whether cliché or systemic, depending on the Generalitat of the infection,” he said.
Dirty? Bush Hag Agree.
The former first daughter said that the experience was enough to scare away the sun.
“I try not, but this is a few years of sun damage,” he admitted, rubbing his arms and adding that he now gets regular skin checks.
He also offered some sage tips for viewers: bring sun protection, especially when you are young.
“SPF BABIES, SPF! Put your hip with him!” Bibb came in.
Dermatologists agree. For daily use, most experts recommend using sun protection with a SPF of at least 30 years. If you spend an prolonged time outdoors, SPF 60 or higher is smart, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.
For the coverage of the whole body, take about an ounce of sun protection in mind: about a glass of shooting. And do not forget to re -apply every two hours, or more if you are swimming or sweating.
Even if you are inside you are not out of hook.
“Most ultraviolet rays (UV) can penetrate the glass, so if you are working or relaxing -you are near a window, you are receiving sun exposure,” said Dr. Elisabeth G. Richard, a dermatologist, at the Skin Cancer Foundation.
The bright side: You should not re -apply as often as you would do it outdoors, probably every four to six hours.
“The solar damage is cumulative,” said Richard. “So even if you are only exposed for a short time, it is important to have protection.”
Experts also recommend duplicating wide joke hats, sunglasses and protective clothing for additional coverage. When the sun is at its peak, between 10am and 2pm, your best bet is to go to the shade.
And if a green chest does not warn enough, do not forget: each sun burnt, even a mild, increases the risk of skin cancer, including melanoma, the most deadly form of all.
In fact, only a burnt childhood burning or adolescence more than doubles the risk of melanoma later in life, according to the skinna Cancer Foundation.
The American Cancer Society estimates that by 2025 104,960 new cases of melanoma in the United States and 8,430 North -Americans will die.
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Image Source : nypost.com