BEIJING, April 25 (Xinhua) --China's Ministry of
Health said Tuesday that while it is very likely that hair dye leads to
allergies, the link between hair dye and cancer is unproved.
An official with the ministry warned that the public
should carefully read labels and instructions of the hair dye products before
they dye their hair.
He said most ingredients of hair dye products contain
allergenic chemicals and allergic reactions occur according to the sensitivity
of the consumer's body, which might range from partial allergy to large-scale
allergy.
The official cited evaluation result by the
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in Lyon, France that there's
no sufficient evidence to prove the link between hair dye and carcinogenesis.
The official also cited the findings of the Cosmetic
Ingredient Review (CIR), a program supported by the Cosmetic, Toiletry and
Fragrance Association (CTFA) in the United States, that the commonly used
chemical hair dye, paraphenylene-diamine (PPD), leads to allergies but animal
tests and epidemiological data show that PPD does not lead to malformation or
cancer.
Last week, state media reported that the death of a
Chinese woman who died of leukemia might be linked to her long term hair dying.
Beijing Daily Messenger reported that chief doctor of the hematology department
in Beijing Friendship Hospital found that the patient's frequent hair dye, about
once every three months, might have caused the leukemia.
Wang was quoted that mainland researchers found that
people who dyed their hair were 3.8 times more likely to develop leukemia,
because PPD could enter the bloodstream through the scalp and then pass into
bone marrow.
The official with the Health Ministry said China
exerts strict supervision over hair dye products, where hair dye products are
regarded as special cosmetics, which must pass a series of tests including toxin
tests, chemical safety tests and risk evaluation of an expert panel.
The Health Ministry issued a list of hair dye
ingredients that made restrictions of ingredient use and rules of labeling.
Ingredients that were not on the list are banned by the ministry in hair dye
products. The list, which came into effect on Jan. 1, 2006, will change the list
according to latest scientific findings.
A note of warning of possible allergies and a pre
skin test is demanded on the label by the ministry.
The ministry will conduct crackdown on illegal use of
banned chemicals in hair dye products this year, the official said.
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