Ultraviolet B, Not A,
Radiation Triggers Melanoma
Experiments with mice show that ultraviolet
A (UVA) radiation does not initiate melanoma skin cancer, but
ultraviolet B (UVB) does.
Dr. Edward C. De Fabo of The George
Washington University Medical Center, Washington DC, and colleagues,
exposed mice to light of various wavelengths. This included UVA,
UVB, solar simulation, an unfiltered sunlamp, and a sunlamp filtered
to remove more than 96 percent of the UVB spectrum.
Melanoma was triggered most strongly
by the UVB lamp, followed by the solar simulator and the sunlamp,
which both had comparable melanoma-inducing properties, De Fabo's
group reports in the September 15th issue of Cancer Research.
In contrast, mice exposed to UVA
light or to the filtered sunlamp had responses no different from
those of a comparison group of animals that were not exposed to
any of the light sources.
"Considerable controversy exists
as to which wavelengths in the sunlight spectrum initiate melanoma,"
De Fabo told Reuters Health. "This paper points out clearly that
UVB is the culprit whereas UVA was ineffective."
The findings are "essential for
accurately determining the melanoma risk of exposure to sunlight
or suntanning lamps," he added.
Furthermore, "By contrasting the
molecular effects of UVB and UVA radiation, genes linked to melanoma
initiation should be more readily identifiable."
SOURCE: Cancer Research, September
15 2004.
Reference
Source 89
October 12, 2004
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