Julian was watching a burly man with beard and sunburn make his way across the lobby. |
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Because sunburn changes the skin's DNA, it has been linked to skin cancers. |
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Despite suffering from sunburn, jellyfish stings and lack of sleep, we all survived and are no worse for wear. |
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In the old days a method of easing the sting of sunburn was to make a potato poultice which would give rapid relief. |
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The immediate effect of acute excess UV radiation exposure is well recognized amongst the lay public as severe sunburn. |
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Sun exposure in childhood and having more than one blistering sunburn in childhood are associated with an increased risk of melanoma. |
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One severe sunburn early in life doubles the chances of future malignant melanoma. |
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For example, a severe sunburn with peeling skin shows p53 in action causing programmed cell death of the skin. |
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Severe sunburn can cause red, sore, tender areas with blistering and peeling. |
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For mild sunburn, apply a moisturising lotion or a special aftersun cream from a pharmacy. |
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Arthritis, asthma and severe skin reactions to poison ivy or sunburn are just some of the disorders these drugs treat. |
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Severe sunburn in childhood can significantly increase the chances of developing malignant melanoma in later life. |
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Then research showed that a severe sunburn or continuously tanned skin increases a person's chance of developing skin cancer. |
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It has a moisturising, soothing action, which you can use on stings, cuts, grazes, spots, and sunburn. |
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If the sunburn is severe, you may need painkillers such as paracetamol or antihistamines. |
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As well as being sore and unsightly, sunburn causes premature ageing and puts you at risk of skin cancer. |
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Her shoulders were covered with rough, peeling skin, the result of sunburn. |
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The late Alabama folk herbalist Tommie Bass used plantain for sunburn, stings, poison ivy and poison oak. |
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Sitting on the beach, on the north end of Monterosso, we all start to sunburn like Brits on holiday. |
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Blisters are usually the result of heat injury, such as sunburn, or from repeated friction, such as shoes that rub. |
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Marks recounts how some painted their legs and arms vivid yellow with picric acid to protect against sunburn. |
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Ozone in the upper atmosphere protects life on Earth from harmful ultraviolet rays from the sun, which can cause sunburn and skin cancer. |
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Excessive sunburn was sagely avoided by taking time out around the interior of the island. |
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Even without sunburn, intense sunlight causes permanent changes in the skin. |
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Taking too much off at once starves the roots and may cause new lower leaves to sunburn. |
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I don't tan easily, but all those days outdoors had weathered me, and given me restless nights suffering from sunburn. |
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One researcher I know says the tannic acid and theobromine in tea help remove heat from sunburn. |
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A sunscreen with a SPF of 15 allows one to be outdoors for up to 15 times longer before the skin would sunburn. |
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I tie mine round my waist as a makeshift sarong and slip it round my shoulders to cover sunburn. |
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The same mixture will take the heat out of sunburn and scalds and soothe insect bites. |
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Avoid hanging them in direct sunlight as their tender leaves and blossoms will soon sunburn and die. |
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By the end of the day, I was full as a tick and red from stem to stern with barbecue sauce, watermelon, and sunburn. |
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Well, the fairer skinned you are, the easier you sunburn, the more poorly you tan, the higher your risk. |
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On June 21, suffering from sunburn and a toothache, he abandoned the project. |
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Most sun worshippers are aware that they should stay out of the midday sun to minimise the risk of sunburn. |
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We do know that adults with light skin, light colored hair and eyes, and those who sunburn easily are most likely to get skin cancer. |
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This risk is in part compounded when a person has a tendency to sunburn rather than tan and also has a history of cumulative sun exposure. |
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At the root of sunburn are damaging molecules, free radicals that increase when the skin gets too much sun. |
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Scores of Scots, including several children, needed hospital treatment for severe sunburn during last week's spell of hot weather. |
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Betacarotene helps to quench the chemical fires started by free radicals, and helps to protect the skin from sunburn. |
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Last summer Japanese inventors unveiled a tiny ultraviolet light sensor for cell phone users concerned about sunburn. |
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He would explain that he got really bad sunburn while he was surfing at the beach. |
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Medical authorities recommend such measures to reduce the risk of sunburn and potential skin cancer due to prolonged exposure to the sun. |
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If you are the only one this summer to avoid the hayfever or sunburn, you'll be feeling pretty smug. |
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Our sunburn is cooling down a lot, we must have used 3 bottles of aftersun and various creams that we got from the chemist. |
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While not as common as sunburn, skin cancer is also caused by over exposure to the sun and can be prevented by the same methods. |
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The aftersun range includes the traditional re-hydration and moisturising cream, a modern Aloe Vera variation and a specific sunburn cream. |
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This is because a brickie becomes acclimatised to the sun's rays, whereas an office worker is more likely to sunburn. |
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In China, it is often recommended to apply cooled black tea to the skin to soothe sunburn. |
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These health effects include sunburn, skin cancer, cataracts and immune suppression. |
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In the past, the term minimum erythemal dose was often used as a measure of the cumulative UVR exposure required to induce erythema or sunburn in people. |
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Remember to protect the baby's face from windburn and sunburn. |
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In 1890-1892, Berliner and Wolters declared that chemical rays were responsible for sunburn, xeroderma pigmentosum and Hutchinson's summer eruptions. |
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The mixture of aloe vera and lavender is a terrific sunburn reliever. |
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Combined with the lobster-red sunburn of my torso and the lily-white band about my middle created by my downturned long-john, I resembled a cylindrical French flag. |
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People with fair, freckled skin, a ruddy complexion, or red hair are more susceptible to sunburn than others, but everyone is susceptible to some degree. |
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This cleansing cream contains camphor, menthol and eucalyptus and was originally developed, around the turn of the 20th century, as a sunburn remedy. |
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On the plus side, at least I haven't had to deal with sunburn. |
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The SunSprite has a UV sensor, which warns you when the rays get intense enough to cause sunburn. |
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Who knew that one day our vain quest for a sunburn would come back to haunt us in the form of panicking every time we see an unfamiliar blotch on our skin? |
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Even before the ozone hole, sunburn and snow blindness were problems during the polar summer because ice reflects both visible light and ultraviolet energy. |
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The Council says tanning in solariums, however controlled, still poses a health risk and can cause sunburn, premature ageing and increase the risk of developing skin cancer. |
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This may result in severe sunburn that eventually may lead to cancer. |
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One problem with tretinoin is increased sensitivity to sunburn. |
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Individuals were asked about their past use of sunlamps, history of sun exposure, tendency to suffer sunburn, previous radiation treatment and smoking history. |
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Just this week, British experts warned that 'millions of Britons are putting themselves at risk of sunburn and skin cancer' by not putting on enough sun lotion. |
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It is common in people who have red hair and in those who sunburn. |
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Zinc preparations can protect against sunburn in the summer and windburn in the winter. |
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A HERD OF pigs were in danger of becoming crispy baconers after going down with a bad case of sunburn. |
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Those beachgoers who reapplied sunscreen every one to two hours, and after leaving the water, were less likely to get a sunburn. |
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What's more, the concentrations of antioxidants need to be substantial, and they have to protect against sunburn, photo-aging, and skin cancer. |
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The dominant histological feature was vacuolar degeneration of the epidermis without sunburn cells. |
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The sunburn of my face, what little of it could be seen through a scraggly growth of beard, had faded to a sickly yellow. |
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Sundews have also been used as an aphrodisiac and to strengthen the heart, as well as to treat sunburn, toothache, and prevent freckles. |
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As well as relieving sunburn, aloe vera can also be used to help soothe irritation caused by insect bites and heat rash. |
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Further exposure will likely result in painful sunburn and increase the risk of sun poisoning, also known as photodermatitis. |
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During the summer the coat becomes lighter in color, reflecting light as well as helping avoid sunburn. |
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Pack outs have been good, despite the fact there were some hailstorms earlier in the year followed by high temperatures which could still give rise to sunburn on later fruit. |
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Patients should avoid or minimize exposure to sunlight and sunlamps and wear sunscreen and protective clothing, as Esbriet may cause patients to sunburn more easily. |
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The researchers were able to effectively eliminate the Langerhans cells in transplanted mice by exposing them to ultraviolet light, giving the animals mild sunburn. |
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No sunburn and no oily splodges on my kaftans plus it smells gorgeous. |
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If you get sunburn, take aspirin or ibuprofen to reduce inflammation, sponge skin with cold water and use a soothing cream such as calamine lotion. |
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Alva Skin Oil, with organic sea buckthorn, is great for sunburn. |
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A temperature plunge from 20c to minus 20c is just not fair and left me trying to figure out whether my two children's rosy cheeks were down to sunburn or windburn. |
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Changing shields is a quick and toolless job on most helmets these days, and switching can help make you safer while reducing the risk of sunburn. |
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In contrast, the darkest whales, the deeply pigmented fin whales, were found to be resistant to sun damage showing the lowest prevalence of sunburn lesions in their skin. |
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While the biggest risk factor is age, other lifestyle factors include smoking, obesity, diet, tanning and sunburn, overdiagnosis and lack of exercise. |
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