Re: Tony's law on falling dishes




"T" <nospam.kd1s@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:MPG.1eeeae393304c68f989965@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In article <aJ4hg.8398$G95.6748@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
joshew@xxxxxxxxxxxxx says...

"T" <nospam.kd1s@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:MPG.1eee9c2e6e316b84989960@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In article <PM000415713FCF63E7@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
oyobo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx says...
T wrote:
Don't try to catch a falling dish - or you'll end up like me with a
gash
in your left hand.


one of the worst cuts I suffered was from running up the stairs with
an
armful
of dishes to be washed. I tripped right at the top and everything
smashed
and
I bled like mad. Probably should have got stitches in a couple places
but
I
hate stitches more than I hate bleeding like that.

The funny thing is I never minded getting stitches until I sliced my
left index finger while trying to repair a connector. Bled like all
hell, I finally sop up enough blood that I decide to hit the emergency
room. By the time I'd gotten there the blood had clotted nicely and the
bleeding stopped but the doctor decided to clean it out.

The worst part of that was the fact that he had to do a local
anesthetic, shot right between my index and middle fingers. Yow! That's
one tender area let me tell you.

That's called a "digital block," by the way.



Then he proceeded to rinse it out and the bleeding started anew. Four
stitches later and all was well.

He did the job properly. The clot you had would have interferred with
proper
closure of the wound, and failure to irrigate a wound often results in
infection. An infection in a finger is serious. Blood circulation there
is
not great, so infections can heal poorly, and they often result in loss
of
the digit if not treated properly and promptly.



I've thus far had 27 stiched on my arms, head and that finger. I've
gotten proficient at taking them out when the time comes. Matter of
fact
when I had the stiches in my head (car accident) they gave me the kit
to
remove the stitches. Ever since then if they don't give them to me I
ask
for it.

That's fine, so long as you have been instructed in how to recognize an
infection and are reliable enough to seek treatment promptly if it
occurs.

Redness, itchiness, etc. Actually the itchiness is when the stiches are
ready to come out.


In Latin, dolor, calor, rubor, and tumor; pain, heat, redness, and swelling.

--Rich


.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Tonys law on falling dishes
    ... hate stitches more than I hate bleeding like that. ... The clot you had would have interferred with proper ... An infection in a finger is serious. ...
    (rec.food.cooking)
  • Re: Tonys law on falling dishes
    ... hate stitches more than I hate bleeding like that. ... An infection in a finger is serious. ... Actually the itchiness is when the stiches are ...
    (rec.food.cooking)
  • Re: Very bad time.
    ... There is some good news. ... with the risk of losing a finger. ... infection coming back now, but wow did I get through the Emergency Room ... missed cleaning ourownselves litterboxes. ...
    (rec.pets.cats.community)
  • Re: Al-Zarqawi is dead...
    ... If one's opponent's reaction to military action is "gee, ... If the infection is gangrene, ... That's a minority of the finger infections I hope. ... After the amputation the necrosis ...
    (rec.martial-arts)
  • Re: Tonys law on falling dishes
    ... Probably should have got stitches in a couple places ... proper closure of the wound, and failure to irrigate a wound often results ... An infection in a finger is serious. ... 24 hours so the clot would not be broken. ...
    (rec.food.cooking)