I just gave some blood today, and the band aid they put over the wound is really sticky. I have a fair amount of hair on my arms and my careful efforts to inch it off are proving quite painful. Does anyone have any handy hints using household products to dissolve or inactivate the adhesive on band-aids?
BobT is quite correct. It’s what my mother always said and she must know. (?!) Or why not apply some of your explosive Prince Rupert’s Drops to it? Heh heh heh and tee hee hee.
When I have a particularly bad one, what I’ll do is take a small scissors and snip away the hair underneath, as I pull. It takes forever, but it’s relatively painless.
Try the Distraction Method. Have a friend or partner stand close to you. On the count of 5, I mean 3, you rip off the bandaid while at the same time your assistant hits you smartly in the head. You won’t notice the pain in your arm at all.
I think some Goo Gone would do the trick. I don’t know how safe it is to pour on a wound but there are no warnings on the bottle indicating that you should keep it away from your skin.
StuyGuy’s suggestion of mineral oil should work, as would any similar product: vegetable oil, Pam cooking spray, WD-40 - although you have to wait a while for the adhesive to soften, and multiple applications may be needed. Not to mention the smell. Maybe next time just shave the elbow-pit first, before you get tapped?
BTW, all the above also work for removing those annoying price tags and “fruit labels” (although I wouldn’t recommend WD-40 for getting tags off apples…)
Sweat works quite well on the sticky-after-giving-blood bandages. I got the hairy arms too, and I’m O neg, so the blood banks call alot. It’s kind of gross, but just get someplace hot and workout your arm and shoulder until sweat is pouring out. Soak it good, and then rest a bit and it will come right off.
The distraction thing works well too. Slap your arm good and yank the bandage off. The goo stuff will come off with soap in the shower.
I once had a bandaid on my breat and when i yanked it off quick, lots of skin came away too, looked like a sunburn peel, but it was raw underneath. If i yank the bandaid off hubby’s arm fast, he gets pimples at the base of the hairs. Rubbing alcohol seems to help on the bandaids we use.
Lee, it sounds like you had an allergic reaction to the adhesive in the bandage. This is becoming more and more of a problem in hospitals, and may be related to changing formulations in bandage adhesives. Next time, try a different brand of bandage, or one of the “non-allergic” types you can get now.
It’s not just for inanimate objects anymore! There is a product called Resolve. It’s specifically designed to remove/dissolve gum, adhesives from labels, stickers, etc… I have never tried it on a “Band-Aid”, but I will the next time I need to remove one.
sailor, it is a violation of the rules of this forum to insult your fellow members. You have violated this rule.
This is a official warning. Further infractions will result in notification to the Administrators of this site and may result in further action, up to revocation of your posting priviliges.
I’m a regular Red Cross pheresis donor. That’s where they they take blood out of one arm, run it through a machine to separate out the platelets and some plasma, combine what’s left with saline and an anticoagulant, and return it to your other arm. In the past year the nurses there have started using “vet wrap,” which adheres to itself and not to hair or skin. Heaven! (Or as close to it as a bandage can get, I suppose.) You might recommend that your local Red Cross start carrying it too–or start carrying a roll with you to donations, in a pinch.
Yeah, it doesn’t help you now, I suppose–but maybe it can prevent future pain.
Assuming you still have the bandage on, here’s an idea I am surprised no one mentioned yet. (Of course, it is possible that I just overlooked it–if so, sorry!) Just take a hair dryer and set it on the “hot” setting. Let the hot air warm the bandaid and it should somewhat melt the adhesive next to your skin making it less painful to remove.