Good question!
Let’s see if we can put the use of TCA into context first. I feel a history lesson coming on!
Back in the 1970s, tattoo removal techniques were a lot different. They were – how shall we say? – a bit less sophisticated. Laser tattoo removal wasn’t widespread or really available, and things like over the counter tattoo removal cream just didn’t exist. People used horrible techniques such as tattoo excision in order to get rid of a tattoo they didn’t want to keep or couldn’t keep for personal / professional reasons.
*Side note: what the heck is tattoo excision? A scary thing, I tell you… it means you cut the skin out containing the tattoo (i.e. hence, you excise it) and then the skin surrounding the missing skin is sewed up over it. Ouch, right?! No kidding. This method certainly left its fair share of scars on my patients, that’s for sure. Okay – back to our history lesson.
It was in this time that people began using TCA for tattoo removal. TCA was successful in removing or treating other skin conditions or skin problems, such as warts and wrinkles, and somewhere along the line, people realized it was effective at fading tattoo ink from the skin. (And it was a heck of a lot more attractive than cutting your skin out via tattoo excision.)
This is important to note because yes – TCA does work for fading tattoos. It doesn’t work overnight but it does work.
(Note that ALL techniques take time – nothing works overnight. Except perhaps for the recently mentioned technique of tattoo excision.)
But then this begs the question: is TCA safe to use for removing tattoos?
It would depend on who you ask.
Countless people have used TCA for fading their own tattoos and it worked out okay. But unlike something like Tat B Gone or Wrecking Balm, TCA tattoo removal does cause some pain. Many people describe it as a mild stinging or burning sensation. This is because TCA creates what’s referred to controlled inflammation on the skin. This inflammation is the method in which it, after repeated use, fades the tattoo ink from the skin.
The risks of using TCA are then two-fold:
1) Some people don’t like the pain.
2) If you don’t know what you’re doing, you could do it wrong, like use pure TCA, and really hurt yourself.
That being said, sellers on Ebay, Amazon, and other places sell TCA in solutions specifically formulated and pre-mixed for tattoo fading like this one here: TCA 20% Chemical Peel solution
or this one, a TCA 20% + Jessner’s Solution
.
The bottom line: sticking with one of these solutions, or a similar TCA peel, removes or minimizes the risks associated with TCA tattoo removal.


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