tanning beds for sale amarillo tx

tanning beds for sale amarillo tx

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Tanning Beds For Sale Amarillo Tx

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The requested URL /listings.php?category=105 was not found on this server. Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request. Wolff Tanning Lamps, Wolff Tanning Bulbs & Tanning Beds FREE SHIPPING ON ALL TANNING BULBS! Why buy from A1 Tanning Supply... Click stars to read reviews LOWEST prices on internet! 30 Day bulb warranty The simplest way to find replacement tanning bulbs is the wizards, above. But if you want to know the full story about tanning beds and tanning bulbs, go to the Tanning Lamp Buying Guide. Specializing in Wolff ELITE Tanning Lamps and ETS Sunquest/Sunvision tanning bulbs and tanning systems. Wolff products including ETS Wolff tanning lamps and Wolff tanning beds are a cornerstone of our business. We carry great products like the Wolff Elite Select, an OEM compatible tanning bulb that is comparable to  Wolff Velocity tanning bulbs, Wolff Diamond Sun tanning bulbs, Wolff Dark Tan Elite, Rave 5.0, and many others.




Its superior blend of A and B phosphors makes it well suited for a wide range of skin types, from fair skinned to dark skinned, but tends to be a more 'bronzing' bulb than others that have a greater emphasis in higher B ray outputs. Please consider your skin type and tanning styles when choosing a tanning bulb, as the higher intensity bulbs may not be the best in all cases. Remember, tanning is a process. Adherence to the tanning schedule listed on your suntan bed is an important guide in obtaining a gradual, safe, and sustained tan, while minimizing the risk of sunburn, which should be avoided.   A sunburn should not be an indicator of a good tanning bulb or a standard method of achieving a suntan. We to the following states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina ,North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming.




New Treatment Guidelines for Back Pain Stress Non-Drug Interventions, Physical Movement and Watchful Waiting Legal Filing Accuses EPA of Unfairly Protecting Monsanto Kennedy Challenges Journalists to Balanced Discussion About Vaccine Safety Vitamin D Is More Effective Than Flu Vaccine, Study Says Healing the Body With Photobiomodulation Visit the Mercola Video Library Sun exposure is crucial for optimal health for a number of reasons, with Vitamin D production being the most important. The best way to get vitamin D is direct sun exposure, but for many, that simply is not practical, especially in the winter. Nearly everyone today has insufficient vitamin D—a deficiency that can negatively impact your health in numerous ways. Timing of your sunlight exposure is important though. In order to help you understand this complex topic you can review my video below. The images used in this video belong to The United States Naval Observatory (USNO) To find the information for your area, please visit the USNO site.




If natural sun exposure isn't an option, then you will need to select another way of optimizing your vitamin D level. The next best means of doing this is by artificial ultraviolet light. You cannot get vitamin D from full spectrum bulbs; it has to be a bulb that produces ultraviolet radiation. Are Tanning Beds Safe? UVB is the type of ultraviolet light that causes your skin to convert cholesterol into vitamin D. It is possible to get UVB from a tanning bed, but the EMFs produced by magnetic ballasts used by the vast majority of tanning beds are of major concern. You want to make sure you're using a tanning bed that employs newer electronic ballasts, which virtually eliminate this risk and are safe. They also use about 30 percent less electricity and produce more light, so they are far more economical to run. But doesn't ultraviolet light cause melanoma? Rates of melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, have been rising for at least the last three decades, and this increase has been largely blamed on exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light from the sun.




However, research published in the British Journal of Dermatology1 shows that the sun is likely nothing more than a scapegoat in the development of melanoma, and the sharp increase may actually be "an artifact caused by diagnostic drift."Researchers believe the rising rates of melanoma are due to an increase in diagnoses of non-cancerous lesions classified, misleadingly, as "stage 1 melanoma." Exposure to sunlight, particularly UVB, is actually protective against melanoma—or rather, the vitamin D your body produces in response to UVB radiation is protective. Oral Vitamin D Supplementation If natural sunlight exposure or a safe tanning bed are both unavailable to you, then the third option is to take an oral vitamin D supplement, in the form of vitamin D3. The oral non-sulfated form of vitamin D might not provide all of the same benefits as the vitamin D created in your skin from sun exposure, as it cannot be converted to vitamin D sulfate. However, an oral supplement is better than no vitamin D at all.




Based on the research available as of 2011,it appears as though most adults need about 8,000 IU's of vitamin D daily in order to get their serum levels above 40 ng/ml. In 2007 the recommended level was between 40 to 60 nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml). Since then, the optimal vitamin D level has been raised to 50-70 ng/ml, and when treating cancer or heart disease, as high as 70-100 ng/ml. This means your risk of overdosing is very slim, even if you take 8,000 IU's of vitamin D3 a day. I recommend having your vitamin D level regularly tested (it's a blood test) to make sure you're within the therapeutic range. Your physician can do this for you, or another alternative is to join the D*Action study. D*Action is a worldwide public health campaign aiming to solve the vitamin D deficiency epidemic through focus on testing, education, and grassroots word of mouth. For more information about D*Action, please see this link. The Perils of Vitamin D Deficiency There are only about 25,000 genes in your body, and vitamin D has been shown to influence about 3,000 of them.

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