From the Perspective of a Nearly 25 years Licensed Beauty Professional and a Former U.S. Territory Director in Professional Beauty
I spent over 15 years behind the chair as a stylist.
I also spent more than a decade running the U.S. territory of an international hair color company, overseeing education, product use, and professional standards across the country.
I wore nail polish.
I performed manicures and pedicures.
I worked hands-on with professional beauty products nearly every day.
At no point during the past 25 years of professional immersion did anyone explain that a single manicure could measurably increase a hormone-disrupting chemical in the body within hours.
That information came later — from the science.
The Study Every Beauty Professional Should Know
In a peer-reviewed human study of 26 women, researchers evaluated exposure to triphenyl phosphate (TPHP), a chemical commonly used in nail polish.
After one manicure, levels of DPHP (TPHP’s primary metabolite) were found to increase up to seven-fold in urine within 10–14 hours.
The most important finding:
This exposure did not occur through inhalation.
It occurred through direct absorption via the nail plate, nail bed, and surrounding skin.
Ventilation does not address this pathway.
PMID: 26485058
What Is TPHP, Exactly?
Triphenyl phosphate (TPHP) is added to many nail products to:
Improve flexibility
Reduce cracking and chipping
Enhance shine and wear time
Chemically, it belongs to a class known as organophosphate esters — compounds that have been widely studied for their ability to interact with hormone signaling pathways.
Once absorbed, TPHP is metabolized into DPHP, which is what researchers measure to assess internal exposure.
How Common Is Exposure?
According to CDC biomonitoring data from NHANES (2011–2020):
DPHP is detected in over 97% of Americans
This confirms that exposure is widespread, even outside salon environments.
PMID: 30396558
Occupational Exposure: Salon Professionals Are Different
Multiple studies show that nail salon workers experience substantially higher exposure levels:
Urinary DPHP concentrations measured at up to four times higher than the general population
This matters because frequency and repetition increase cumulative endocrine burden.
PMID: 28437481
What the Mechanistic Science Shows
In laboratory and cellular models, TPHP has been shown to:
Mimic estrogen signaling
Inhibit androgen (testosterone) activity
Alter thyroid hormone pathways
Activate PPAR-γ, a receptor involved in fat storage and metabolic regulation
These findings explain how exposure could influence hormone-regulated systems. They do not claim certainty — they explain biological plausibility.
PMID: 30396558
Human Associations Linked to Higher Exposure
Human observational studies associate higher exposure to organophosphate esters (including TPHP/DPHP) with:
Increased risk of pregnancy loss
Reduced embryo quality in IVF contexts
Altered sperm morphology
Lower testosterone levels
Reduced fertility outcomes in both sexes
These are associations, not guarantees — but they are consistent across multiple studies.
PMID: 39320888
PMID: 40200288
The Labeling Gap in Beauty Products
One of the most difficult truths for professionals to accept:
Even products marketed as “non-toxic,” “clean,” or “10-free” may still contain:
TPHP
Closely related organophosphate substitutes
Plasticizers with similar endocrine activity
This occurs because:
Full ingredient disclosure is often not required
Functional additives may fall under fragrance or proprietary blends
Marketing claims are not the same as toxicological testing
Who May Want to Pay Closer Attention
Based on current evidence, increased caution may be warranted for:
Daily nail polish users
Nail salon workers and educators
Individuals planning to conceive
Those managing hormone or thyroid conditions
This is about awareness, not alarm.
Why I’m Sharing This
I share this as someone who:
Worked hands-on in beauty for 15 years
Led a professional hair color territory at a national level for over a decade
Trusted the systems that trained us
No one told us to consider nail polish as a hormone exposure pathway.
Now the data exists.
One Question to Leave You With
You do not need to overhaul your life to reduce exposure.
What is one swap you’ve made — or are considering — to reduce toxin exposure in your daily routine?
Sources (PubMed)
- PMID: 26485058
- PMID: 28437481
- PMID: 30396558
- PMID: 39320888
- PMID: 40200288





