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#1 2003-01-27 10:30 pm
- SwisSlesS
- Member

- From: Home of the Massholes
- Registered: 2002-06-19
- Posts: 8307
Closing Wounds
We all make mistakes sometimes. You could be chopping some carrots and have the knife slip, or, like me, you could we working with someone's frayed derailleur cable and have it slice your hand open. The way you get your wounds is beside the point, how you fix them is what I'm going for here? Do you use Band-Aids? If so, what kind? Liquid bandage? Elmer's glue? Something even crazier? If so, let's hear about it.
Personally, nothing works better for me than a Band-Aid
I'm a dog, spelled backwards.
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#2 2003-01-27 10:35 pm
- dinerfan
- a natural, zesty enterprise

- From: the sunny side
- Registered: 2000-12-31
- Posts: 11093
Re: Closing Wounds
slice your hand open. ... how you fix them is what I'm going for here? Do you use Band-Aids? If so, what kind? Liquid bandage? Elmer's glue? Something even crazier? If so, let's hear about it.
I hope you're not standing there bleeding, waiting for an answer. Thta would really be sad!
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#3 2003-01-27 10:37 pm
- Slarty
- Member
- From: MAF. Duh.
- Registered: 2002-08-25
- Posts: 1938
Re: Closing Wounds
I use Krazy Glue. Or a little JB Weld.
Git off my lawn, ya durn kids!
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#4 2003-01-27 10:38 pm
- SwisSlesS
- Member

- From: Home of the Massholes
- Registered: 2002-06-19
- Posts: 8307
Re: Closing Wounds
I hope you're not standing there bleeding, waiting for an answer. Thta would really be sad!
lol, no, I'm not. I was actually just talking to Kirk in IRC about this kind of thing and it got me thinking. I mostly want to see if anyone has actually ever used Elmer's glue. Because I've heard that you can use it, being non-toxic and all, but I've never tried it or known anyone who has.
I'm a dog, spelled backwards.
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#5 2003-01-27 10:40 pm
Re: Closing Wounds
i can't remember the last time i had a cut. i usually just hold it til it stops bleeding and not do anything to it. 
There are 10 type of people in the world... those you know binary and those that don't.
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#6 2003-01-27 10:42 pm
- Slarty
- Member
- From: MAF. Duh.
- Registered: 2002-08-25
- Posts: 1938
Re: Closing Wounds
I would think that actually putting an adhesive in a wound would probably be a bad idea.
(for the Littlebrains)
See, when I say it, I'm joking, which means I don't actually do it, but I'm saying it because the absurdity of it is funny.
Git off my lawn, ya durn kids!
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#7 2003-01-27 11:03 pm
Re: Closing Wounds
Well, I'm an expert on this seeing as I've cut myself open more than the emerg workers at the hospital care to remember... seeing as they stopped asking for my name at one point, and would just type it in the computer as I walked in the door.
Last time I cut myself open really good, it was probably about 3 inches long, and a quarter inch wide... quite a split. I walked home (1.5 hours) before realizing how bad it was (I'm a badass who can stand pain like nothing you've see, or something like that)... oh man, it was horrible, but I didn't want to have to go all the way to the hospital! That would take forever.
So I got out some ice and froze my knee, then cleaned it out completly by hand, then used some tape (with no sticky part on the cut, duh) and used that to keep the skin close enough to heel... in reality it needed stiches... I'd say 8 approx, but I didn't have a needle/thread around... I kept my knee straight for hours and made sure I wasn't dripping blood everywhere.
I couldn't walk properly for over a week (due to my knee not being able to bend fully without splitting), but it fixed itself, and I got yet another scare to show off. I also put on some of that healing stuff, polysporin or whatever the non-name brand is. That helped quite a bit.
Usually the best thing for a cut, in no particular order, is:
a) stopping the bleeding
b) keeping the skin close together (in the even it really needs stiches)
c) that special ointment, or any is good
d) air, oxygen! Let it breath! Keeping it covered delays the process, only use a band-aid when needed.
Now for pain, I say suck it up... 95% of the time. Why? That way you build a tolerance to the pain, but if you must (say you don't want to go home yet before getting stiches after getting a g-t snow racer brake stabbed into your knee for 6 stiches), freeze it. Go walk up to that snow bank and stick your knee in there for 30 sec - 1min until it's numb, then go back and have some more fun... just don't forget to actually go to the hospital when you are done if you can't keep it shut at home.
"The only thing better than a woman you can control in bed, is one that you can't."
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#8 2003-01-27 11:12 pm
- Robert B.
- Reality Deficient

- From: The pit of despair
- Registered: 1999-03-09
- Posts: 10275
Re: Closing Wounds
If it's a minor wound:
First, stop the bleeding. Then, clean it with water and then some peroxide. Some Neosporin and then cover it. Do that for two days, changing the bandage out daily, if not more often. On the third day, let it air out with no bandage. Should be good after that.
Slarty, actually superglue/krazy glue was originally developed for medical use during either the Korean or Vietnam war, I forget. You can use it to close wounds.
"Evil will always triumph because Good is dumb."
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#9 2003-01-27 11:14 pm
- Shaft
- Member
- From: In the Space Between
- Registered: 2002-12-09
- Posts: 314
Re: Closing Wounds
Krazy glue for sure. Liquid Bandaid is like 9 bucks for a little bitty dropper. Krazy glue is 99 cents for 10 times as much. Smells like the same stuff to me. It sticks yer fingers together the same way too .... 
I'm A Rock 'n' Roll DeLuxe Caddy-Fin Hip-Cat Daddy-O
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#10 2003-01-27 11:29 pm
- jkahless
- Member

- From: Right in front of you.
- Registered: 2002-01-05
- Posts: 10020
Re: Closing Wounds
Krazy glue for sure. Liquid Bandaid is like 9 bucks for a little bitty dropper. Krazy glue is 99 cents for 10 times as much. Smells like the same stuff to me. It sticks yer fingers together the same way too ....
superglue is fun
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#11 2003-01-27 11:35 pm
Re: Closing Wounds
The last serious wound I got had to be cauterized because there was no flesh left to stick back together. 
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#12 2003-01-27 11:36 pm
- Slarty
- Member
- From: MAF. Duh.
- Registered: 2002-08-25
- Posts: 1938
Re: Closing Wounds
The last serious wound I got had to be cauterized because there was no flesh left to stick back together.
Ew. Uh...thanks for sharing?
Git off my lawn, ya durn kids!
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#13 2003-01-27 11:40 pm
Re: Closing Wounds
The last serious wound I got had to be cauterized because there was no flesh left to stick back together.
Ew. Uh...thanks for sharing?
Yup. Nothing like the smell of your own flesh burning.
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#14 2003-01-28 12:07 am
- J_Hawk
- Member

- From: Pittsburgh PA-(College)
- Registered: 2002-09-03
- Posts: 221
Re: Closing Wounds
In theater in high school, we used electrical tape for minor cuts and gaff tape for the big wounds. Gaff tape is sort of similar to duct tape except that it has a cloth backing and doesn't leave as much of residue when removed, it holds everything together in theater. My bassoon teacher advocates krazy glue if you make a mistake with reed knives.
FALSTAFF
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transform me to a piece of cheese!
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#15 2003-01-28 12:33 am
- benightedbastard
- Cheap and Juicy!

- From: Western Australia
- Registered: 1999-06-03
- Posts: 28733
- Website
Re: Closing Wounds
I prefer elastoplast bandaid strips. They have a nice large padded area, and stick like smurf to a blanket.
First, stop the bleeding. Then, clean it with water and then some peroxide. Some Neosporin and then cover it. Do that for two days, changing the bandage out daily, if not more often. On the third day, let it air out with no bandage. Should be good after that.
I'd agree with that, but I'd clean with water then dust with Bismuth Formulaic Iodide rather than use peroxide. It's an old wive's tale that the bubbling when you apply diluted peroxide is the bugs dying; it's really the bacteria happily reducing the peroxide.
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#16 2003-01-28 12:38 am
- benightedbastard
- Cheap and Juicy!

- From: Western Australia
- Registered: 1999-06-03
- Posts: 28733
- Website
Re: Closing Wounds
As for hand-based scarring, I have scars on each hand where I've gouged out divots of flesh and flipped flipped them back into place. I haven't done any damage in a while, though, surprisingly.
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#17 2003-01-28 2:13 am
- delta wolph
- Member

- From: SoCal
- Registered: 2002-12-30
- Posts: 3471
Re: Closing Wounds
macdaddy: i had a cut like that on my arm, except not really deep, about a month ago, it healed in about a week, which was actually very very fast which was surprising. i had to wear long sleeves to school for 2 weeks after it healed tho cause it was nasty lookin
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#18 2003-01-28 5:58 am
- goodvibes
- Member
- From: Melbourne, Australia
- Registered: 2001-10-16
- Posts: 1138
Re: Closing Wounds
If the cut is from something dirty, or an animal bite, remember to get a tetanus shot. They last for about seven years I believe, so you will be safe the next time you get cut.
It's hard to fly like a turkey when you're up to your ass in alligators.
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#19 2003-01-28 6:16 am
- registered_user
- bulletproof
- From: padding: zero-pixels;
- Registered: 2000-12-19
- Posts: 16026
- Website
Re: Closing Wounds
I don't use band-aids unless I happen ot have them in the house. I usually wash it, and pat it dry and that does it. If it's more severe than that, in my experience, then it probably needs medical attention. But I have fashioned bandages out of miscellaneous tape and paper towels.
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#20 2003-01-28 7:12 am
Re: Closing Wounds
I once had a blood vessel in my nostril cauterised.
As for bandaids, the best ones are the waterproof, highly adhesive, X-Ray opaque blue industrial ones that we have at work.
I used to have quite the assorment of (open) nicks and cuts on my hands, but they made us use these crappy little "carton cutter" which only give you 10 mm of blade to play with, and they go blunt in about half an hour. 
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#21 2003-01-28 8:16 am
- Jehannum
- Banned
- From: Albuquerque
- Registered: 1999-07-24
- Posts: 8404
Re: Closing Wounds
It depends on what I'm doing, and how I did it.
If I cut myself on some electrical work I'm doing, I've been known to just use the soldering iron to cauterize the wound. If I'm doing car work, I just pack some dirt and motor oil into it to stop the bleeding, and then clean it later and bandage it.
If it's something really serious (like when my friend drilled through my finger), I go to the hospita..
"Goodness he just keeps going and going. He's like the energizer bunny of stupid." - Neut
Your powers are useless! I'm wearing my tin-foil underwear!
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#22 2003-01-28 8:54 am
- The New Guy
- Member

- From: Left of left
- Registered: 2000-10-18
- Posts: 3422
Re: Closing Wounds
Superglue was actually developed to close wounds. That's why it sticks to skin so well.
Myself, I use this stuff called NuSkin for small wounds and band aids for bigger ones. The NuSkin is really cheap compared to that BandAid liquid bandage stuff, and it works just as well. However, it smells like cloves and burns like a mother when you put it on, so if you can't stand pain, you better not use it. As for disinfectant, I'm a hydrogen peroxide man myself; you can see it working, it doesn't hurt too much and you can get a gallon for about $5.
The car of the future is a train with a bike waiting at the other end.
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#23 2003-01-28 9:02 am
- pottymouth
- Uncreative
- Moderator

- From: JP, MA
- Registered: 2002-02-06
- Posts: 17411
- Website
Re: Closing Wounds
I like to leave my wounds open. Sher, they're tough to keep clean but they make much nicer scars. All wounds will stop bleeding eventually, it just depends how much blood is in there.
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#24 2003-01-29 1:25 am
- benightedbastard
- Cheap and Juicy!

- From: Western Australia
- Registered: 1999-06-03
- Posts: 28733
- Website
Re: Closing Wounds
As for disinfectant, I'm a hydrogen peroxide man myself; you can see it working, it doesn't hurt too much and you can get a gallon for about $5.
::points to earlier post::
By seeing it work, I assume you mean you see it bubble? That's the bacteria converting hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water. All that's doing is confirming the presence of certain types of bacteria.
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#25 2003-01-29 9:40 pm
- Roc Kit
- Leave blank to use forum default.

- From: Untold Ages Past
- Registered: 2001-08-22
- Posts: 2935
Re: Closing Wounds
I liked the options in Grapes of Wrath: cobwebs or urine.
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