Beware of the Latest TikTok Trend: Nasal Spray Tans

Beware of the Latest TikTok Trend: Nasal Spray Tans

news image

March 3, 2022 — TikTok users seeking deep tans are using a questionable method: spraying self-tanning products up their noses, and then lying in the sun or in a tanning bed.

Although nasal spray tanning is being described as a new “viral” trend, it seems to have gotten its start as early as the spring of 2021. The tanning method appears to be especially popular in the United Kingdom, where self-tanning product brands have TikTok videos promoting nasal sprays.

The rising concern about this and other viral TikTok trends has prompted a bipartisan group of state attorneys general to launch an investigation.

“As children and teens already grapple with issues of anxiety, social pressure, and depression, we cannot allow social media to further harm their physical health and mental wellbeing,” Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey, a Democrat, said in a statement. “State attorneys general have an imperative to protect young people and seek more information about how companies like TikTok are influencing their daily lives.”

Healey, along with colleagues from California, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, Tennessee, and Vermont, will look into whether Chinese-based TikTok violates state consumer protection laws.

The trend of people shooting spray tan up their nose is just the latest in a long line of so-called TikTok challenges that have caused controversy, and often, injury.

In a February TikTok, put out by the British company So Tanned, a young woman appears with text stating that she uses nasal spray “morning and night” and then adds self-tanning oral drops a half-hour before getting into a tanning bed.

But, dermatologist Lily Talakoub, MD, of McLean, VA, posted a TikTok with the bold warning “DO NOT USE NASAL TANNING SPRAY!” In the video, the white-coat-clad Talakoub is in the foreground of the TikTok made by @sashawoodx.

“Don’t try this at home,” says Talakoub.

“Don’t try this even if you think it can make you tanner. It can cause nausea, vomiting, very bad side effects,” she says, adding that “this can be very dangerous to your health.”

It’s also worth mentioning that self-tanning products are not approved by the FDA for breathing up your nose or mouth.

Still, another U.K. company, 2bTanned, posted a TikTok showing a user spraying the product up his nose and, in the comments, @2btanned suggested that the spray should be used at least a week or two before sun exposure “in order to get full effects.”

@sashawoodx tells her viewers “Don’t walk … RUN for these products,” as she shows herself in several outfits, squirting 2bTanned spray up her nose. As of March 2, the TikTok video had been viewed over 212,000 times.

TikTokker @giannaarose, who has 125,000 followers, said in a video that she uses “2-3 sprays” up the nose before stepping into a tanning bed. A commenter said, “this is scary but where do I buy it.”

The main ingredient in self-tanning products is dihydroxyacetone, or DHA. It’s FDA-approved for use on skin, causes a chemical reaction when heat is applied, and a pigment is deposited on the skin.

Adam Friedman, MD, a professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, in Washington, DC, says given that self-tanning products were never meant to be inhaled and that nasal sprays of any kind must be approved by the FDA, a company promoting the products is playing a dangerous game.

“People could go to jail over this,” he says.

What’s more, the products are unlikely to produce a tan, he says.

“Because of the way self-tanners work, it would make no sense,” says Friedman.

“It’s purely a camouflage,” he says, adding that it does not produce melanin, which determines skin color.

Self-tanners were never intended to be inhaled, “so who knows what those ingredients would do to a different anatomical site like the inner passages of the nose,” Friedman says.

At a minimum, spraying into the nose could at cause irritation. But it could also potentially lead to acute or long-term damage, he says.

Some other spray ingredients, such as tyrosine and tyrosinase, are involved in producing melanin, but they only act within skin cells, says Friedman. If sprayed into the nose, the ingredients might produce melanin inside the nose, but not on the skin.

“This is not going to work,” he says. “If anything, it could be dangerous.”

Friedman says there’s no such thing as a safe tan, and self-tanning products offer no protection from dangerous ultraviolet rays. The nasal sprays are “quick fixes” that are not going to work, he says.

“At the end of the day, just don’t inhale,” says Friedman.

Read More