You know when you go on a daylong road trip and realize, hours later, that one arm is tanned (or burned) from resting on the windowpane, and. It’s all due to the frequent exposure of ultraviolent a (uva).
Essentially, ultraviolet a (uva) rays transmitted through the window of his delivery truck have severely damaged the skin on the left side of his face during the 28 years he has spent driving on the job.
Truck driver with sun damage on half his face. He was a trucker and, for 28 years, his face received much more sunlight on the left side, resulting on premature aging. Striking photo reveals dark side of sunshine. Truck driver bill mcelligott, 69, has unilateral dermatoheliosis, according to the new england journal of medicine.
This guy is 69 years. Incredible image of truck driver shows what 28 years of sun damage looks like. Jennifer gordon/nejm) a new striking image.
The right side of his face looks regularly aged. I used to deliver pizza (two years, so i have nothing on professional drivers) and i often drove with my windows down for nice weather. The damage is typically limited to the left side of the face, since the position of the driver’s side window leaves this side more exposed to the sun’s harsh rays.
The skin on the damaged side of his face is thicker a process known as unilateral dermatoheliosis. The photo has recently resurfaced and gone viral as it shows the shocking effect sun damage can have on your face. A few days ago, i saw this photo on a friend's facebook feed, accompanied by a caption claiming that it showed a truck driver who had exposed half his.
Scientists at northwestern university in chicago studied the damage to the. “truck driver face” is the result of sun damage after years and massive hours behind the wheel driving a truck. Bill edward mcelligott drove a milk delivery truck for 28 years, and the left side of his face — the side closest to the window — looks about 20 years older than his right side.
The photograph below shows how the left side of. I'm a very white white girl. Truck drivers, i'm assuming, are driving at the high/different angle, so see more sun.
Truck driver bill mcelligott, 69, has unilateral dermatoheliosis, according to the new england journal of medicine. Essentially, ultraviolet a (uva) rays transmitted through the window of his delivery truck have severely damaged the skin on the left side of his face during the 28 years he has spent driving on the job. Truck driver william mcelligott's face is a graphic illustration of the damaging effects of the sun.
This picture of bill mcelligott, a truck driver who's been working for almost 30 years, shows how uva rays transmitted through the window on his side of the truck and caused sun damage to the side of his face. Uv rays destroy the skin’s elastic fibres which causes the driver’s deep wrinkles. New england journal of medicine (cbs news) it's no secret that lots of sun damages the.
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