smhufflepuff
super-duper hedgiepig
A few years ago Tex was diagnosed with MRSA. Happily, he was successfully treated and it did not spread to us humans.
While we were able to treat him with medicine applied directly to his little nose by dropper and via nebulization, and could clean his belongings either in the wash or wiped down with a strong chemical cleaner (then rinsed a lot before given back to him), it left a lot of things un-cleanable. My foray into researching this nasty bug told me, given the right conditions, it could live on surfaces for months. Months! I wondered: if it’s there, how do I get MRSA off the walls? Out of the carpet? All those little places that it could hide?
I no longer recall the path it took me to get there, but I happened across some research articles that spoke of killing staph using certain wavelengths of light. I’m attaching the articles I read then and a newer one I just found.
And, yes, I do now own a light box that sends out a frightening amount of blue light.
While we were able to treat him with medicine applied directly to his little nose by dropper and via nebulization, and could clean his belongings either in the wash or wiped down with a strong chemical cleaner (then rinsed a lot before given back to him), it left a lot of things un-cleanable. My foray into researching this nasty bug told me, given the right conditions, it could live on surfaces for months. Months! I wondered: if it’s there, how do I get MRSA off the walls? Out of the carpet? All those little places that it could hide?
I no longer recall the path it took me to get there, but I happened across some research articles that spoke of killing staph using certain wavelengths of light. I’m attaching the articles I read then and a newer one I just found.
And, yes, I do now own a light box that sends out a frightening amount of blue light.
Attachments
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guffey 2006 In vitro bactericidal effects of 405nm and 470nm blue light.pdf276 KB
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maclean 2008 high intensity narrow spectrum light inactivtaion and wavelength sensitivity of sta.pdf195.9 KB
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enwemeka 2008 405nm SLD light photodestroys MRSA in vitro.pdf102.4 KB
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enwemeka 2009 blue 470nm light kills MRSA in vitro.pdf279.1 KB
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delucca 2012 blue light 470nm effectively inhibits bacterial and fungal growth.pdf394.7 KB