One of the first things people notices concerning me, or so I'm told, is my fair skin. Deceptively tannable, my skin is something I take a lot of pride in keeping pale, for aesthetic and health reasons. What you can't see just by looking at me, however, is that I've suffered from fibromyalgia for the last decade.
Fair skin and fibromyalgia may not seem related—I've certainly never connected the two—but a new study has a handful of experts between these outwardly unassociated dots.
Fibromyalgia is a chronic pain syndrome that can cause apparently never-ending musculoskeletal aches—something I know all too well. Even though millions of people, regularly women, have been diagnosed, many of us haven't found enough release from the medications and physical therapies most often recommended. Some have twisted to alternative options, but few appear as unsafe as the action investigates by Wake Forest University researchers.
A team of rheumatologists and dermatologists tracked 19 fibromyalgia patients as they used tanning beds three times a week for six weeks. The volunteers were divided into two groups: one that was exposed to UV light, and one that was exposed to non-UV light. (Both groups had self-tanner practical so it would not be apparent which participants were getting the UV exposure.)
Although the non-UV group didn't become aware of any dissimilarity in their pain, "People in the UV group reported a modest development," according to study author and director of the Center for Dermatology Research at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Steven R. Feldman, MD, PhD.
Some may find these results promising, but personally, I find them upsetting. I'm not willing to risk the youthful look I've maintained by avoiding natural and artificial sunlight, and more prominently, I have no interest in getting skin cancer. Numerous studies have shown that a single tanning session can damage DNA, so the idea of subjecting myself to multiple, ongoing tanning-bed treatments with the goal of reasonable hurting release is one I'd rather not entertain.
The concept of treating fibromyalgia with UV light is one that requirements much more research and the authors of this study are the first to confess that. However, additional option therapies must be explored—ones in which the risks don't outweigh the benefits.
There are days that my battle alongside fibromyalgia feels desperate, but not sufficient to take a possibility with tanning. As tender as it may be, fibromyalgia won't kill me, but melanoma could.