id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_o3cfr6ydsna5rbilixfzlffhku Bassel H. Mahmoud Impact of Long-Wavelength UVA and Visible Light on Melanocompetent Skin 2010.0 6 .pdf application/pdf 5451 1067 76 Impact of Long-Wavelength UVA and Visible Light on Melanocompetent Skin The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of visible light on the immediate pigmentation and skin types IV–VI: UVA1 (340–400 nm) and visible light (400–700 nm). pigment induced by visible light and UVA1 were different. source that emits 98.3% visible light on cutaneous pigmentary alterations in individuals with Fitzpatrick skin types skin type II using the same light sources of UVA1 and visible as measured using DRS, at sites irradiated with visible light radiation and 60 J cm�2, respectively, as indicated in the figure; (b) six photos showing sites irradiated with visible light at doses of 8, 40, 80, 160, 320, and 480 J cm�2, following UVA1 and visible light irradiation in skin types DRS at sites irradiated with visible light radiation (8–480 J cm�2) and with UVA1 and visible light irradiation depends on skin type, as ./cache/work_o3cfr6ydsna5rbilixfzlffhku.pdf ./txt/work_o3cfr6ydsna5rbilixfzlffhku.txt