As I have a cut that I’d like to keep covered, and I’m out of band-aids, I decided to “make” my own with a piece of sterile gauze, some Neosporin, and a small strip of duct tape.
Is there anything wrong with this? Is the glue from the duct tape harmful in any way? Thanks in advance.
No. I do it all the time, but I use a little spit, a piece of toilet paper or shop rag remnant and electrical tape. But only when super-glue isn’t handy.
Even better, let that sucker air-out. They heal faster that way for me.
Fagjunk Theology: Not just for sodomite propagandists anymore.
My SO swears by Super Glue tm. And he cuts himself every single day of the week. I have tried it and it stings like the dickens. Is the cut small enough to try it?
I’m not sure who makes it, but I always keep a bottle of New-Skin handy. It’s like superglue, but…uh, packaged differently. You just brush some on to whatever wound, let it dry, and it seals your cut. Stings like nothing else, but I swear by it for cuts on my fingers (violins and bandaids don’t work well together.)
One million stagehands and theatre techs can’t be wrong! Duct tape makes for a splendid bandage that won’t split or peel off no mater how many more flats you have to move.
The masochistic ones just use the tape alone. Saner folks use a bit of napkin from the roach coach if they have the time.
I recall during some first aid training, our teacher, and EMT told us that they keep small disposable diapers and duct tape in the truck at all times as a way of creating whatever bandages they need.
my friend had a prettyu nasty cutn on his forehead. So we took him to the hospital, where they used a medical form of super glue. I asked the nurse what the differnce between the 2 was and he said nothing.
Since then I’ve used super glue for all my non-stitches required cuts. Works wonders
In the emerg, they often use sterile superglue to close wounds. It should not be used anywhere remotely close to the eyes, on mucous membranes or on cuts that are actively bleeding. And if you put it on the wrong spot, it creates one heck of a mess and can make the wound much worse. But the idea isn’t wacky at all.
Duct tape and neosporin would work fine, but usually so would plain neosporin. Presumably the tape would help stop the bleeding a bit faster.
A one dose tube of medical superglue costs about $40. It is sterile, more liquidy, comes with a handy applicator and dries faster than superglue, but is essentially the same stuff, just 40 times the price.
I seem to be having an outbreak of sheer stupidity clayton_e, cuz I don’t follow. Do you want to know how he uses it?
If so…hold the cut together and glue. It serves the same purpose as a butterfly bandage, sealing over the cut.
on review…yeah, what Waddle and Dr_Paprika said.
:smack:
Quickie suturing was one of the first uses for “super glue.” Looks like 1956 was its first use for “super glue” cyanoacrylate adhesives in suturing, and the US Army was all over it in 1966 and started using it in Vietnam.