THE LOBBY A gathering place. Introductions, sports, showin' off your ride, birthday-anniversary-milestone, achievements, family oriented humor.

          
Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 05-13-2024, 12:00 PM
hurryinhoosier62 hurryinhoosier62 is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Floyd Co., IN/SE KY
Posts: 3,940
Default Use gloves!

Being an old dog mechanic, I have always resisted using gloves while working. My reasons: I couldn’t “feel” and I could find any that fit correctly ( 3XL glove size…not easy to find!). Nearly two weeks ago I developed pain in my right middle finger; nothing new, I’ve had moderate arthritis in my hands for years. This pain was different; it was in the joint accompanied by swelling. This started on Wednesday two weeks ago. By Friday my finger was double its normal size, so off to immediate care I go. The diagnosis: cellulitis. A prescription of Keflex and off I go, except my finger was getting worse, not better. By Sunday, I couldn’t sleep due to the pain, so off to immediate care I go again. The APNP on duty x-rayed my finger to make sure there were no foreign bodies in my finger, examines the finger and tells me he needs to take a culture sample because he’s certain I have pickup MRSA. He lanced the finger ( which actually felt good because of the swelling) with a little puss but a copious amount of blood comes flying out of the finger. He gives me a shot of Bactim, a sulfa based antibiotic that kills MRSA, a bit of hydrocodone for the pain and orders to see my PCP soon( I had an appointment for the following day). My PCP looked at my finger on Monday. His diagnosis: MRSA. He told me to finish my prescription of bactim; he also set up an appointment with a ortho to examine my finger for joint damage for May 20. At this point, my finger is pretty much back to normal; it still swollen at the tip and the skin looks scalded from the edema, but I have no pain and can use the finger. The lesson I learned? WEAR GLOVES! I found a brand of exam gloves that comes in 2XL ( a bit snug but loosen up enough for me to wear), so gloves WILL be the order of the day in garage. According to my PCP, had I waited a day or two later to go to immediate care the probability is I would have lost that finger due to necrosis.

__________________
“It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.”

Dr. Thomas Sowell
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to hurryinhoosier62 For This Useful Post:
  #2  
Old 05-13-2024, 01:45 PM
Keith Seymore's Avatar
Keith Seymore Keith Seymore is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Motor City
Posts: 8,192
Default

So -

What precipitated all this? Had you been in the garage a couple days before the flare up? Anything significant happen while you were in the garage? Was there a foreign body in your finger? How do you get MRSA from a garage environment (rather than a hospital where there is an infected person)?

Thanks,

K

__________________
'63 LeMans Convertible
'63 Grand Prix
'65 GTO - original, unrestored, Dad was original owner, 5000 original mile Royal Pontiac factory racer
'74 Chevelle - original owner, 9.85 @ 136 mph besthttp://www.superchevy.com/features/s...hevy-chevelle/
My Pontiac Story: http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/...d.php?t=560524
"Intro from an old Assembly Plant Guy":http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=342926
  #3  
Old 05-13-2024, 02:41 PM
jhein's Avatar
jhein jhein is offline
Chief Ponti-yacker
 
Join Date: Dec 2020
Location: Oregon
Posts: 999
Default

Yep. Gloves are mandatory for me now. When I was younger I never used gloves. Nobody did really. Now whenever I'm doing yard work or mechanical work I always wear gloves. I'm not as tough as I used to be.

__________________
70 TA, 467 cid IAII, Edelbrock D-port heads, 9.94:1, Butler HR 236/242 @ .050, 520/540 lift, 112 LSA, Ray Klemm calibrated Q-jet, TKX (2.87 1st/.81 OD), 3.31 rear

https://youtube.com/shorts/gG15nb4FWeo?feature=share
The Following User Says Thank You to jhein For This Useful Post:
  #4  
Old 05-13-2024, 03:06 PM
carcrazy carcrazy is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Wake Forest, NC
Posts: 1,990
Default

MRSA is no joke! Gloves are a good idea where feasible.

__________________
My money talks to me-it usually says goodbye!
The Following User Says Thank You to carcrazy For This Useful Post:
  #5  
Old 05-13-2024, 04:07 PM
jabgolfcars jabgolfcars is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Newport News, VA
Posts: 54
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jhein View Post
Yep. Gloves are mandatory for me now. When I was younger I never used gloves. Nobody did really. Now whenever I'm doing yard work or mechanical work I always wear gloves. I'm not as tough as I used to be.
X2. I'm not a tough guy anymore.

The Following User Says Thank You to jabgolfcars For This Useful Post:
  #6  
Old 05-13-2024, 04:26 PM
hurryinhoosier62 hurryinhoosier62 is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Floyd Co., IN/SE KY
Posts: 3,940
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith Seymore View Post
So -

What precipitated all this? Had you been in the garage a couple days before the flare up? Anything significant happen while you were in the garage? Was there a foreign body in your finger? How do you get MRSA from a garage environment (rather than a hospital where there is an infected person)?

Thanks,

K
Keith, that is what’s crazy; nothing I had been doing would have had contact with MRSA contaminated surfaces. I know mice can carry MRSA; I fight mice in the garage constantly. This is the ONLY thing I can think of that COULD have had MRSA involved.

__________________
“It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.”

Dr. Thomas Sowell
  #7  
Old 05-13-2024, 04:47 PM
59safaricat 59safaricat is offline
Senior Chief
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Land of the fee, home of the slave
Posts: 252
Default

Went through this with my 75 year old father almost 2 months ago. Had a minor cut on this thumb from doing yard work. Swells up a few days later and goes to the doctor. They write it off as nothing and give him some antibiotics. Antibiotics do nothing and his thumb swells up like a balloon. I threw him in the car and off to the emergency. They cut out a bunch nasty junk and sew him back up. I threw away all of his gloves that were filled with holes and told him to wear new ones at all times.

Damn Vietnam veterans think they're still 20 and invisible to everything....

The Following User Says Thank You to 59safaricat For This Useful Post:
  #8  
Old 05-14-2024, 07:38 AM
chuckies76ta's Avatar
chuckies76ta chuckies76ta is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,113
Default

Thanks for posting. Maybe helpful information to someone one day. A friend of mine picked his hand with a thumb tack and dam near lost his hand by the time doctors realized what was going on. Same thing, MRSA.

__________________
68 Firebird. IA2 block, 505 cu in, E-head, Solid roller 3650 weight. Reid TH400 4:11 gear. 29" slick.
Best so far 10.12@133 mph. 1.43 60 ft.
76 Trans am, TKX .81 o/d, 3.73 Moser rearend,
468 with KRE D-ports, Doug headers, 3" Exh.
The Following User Says Thank You to chuckies76ta For This Useful Post:
  #9  
Old 05-14-2024, 06:09 PM
MIAGIMAN MIAGIMAN is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Florida & Georgia
Posts: 48
Default

HurryinHoosier,
I have been wondering a bunch as to who is wearing gloves these days? As a gearhead when I sold my business 15 years ago I went to work with my brothers. My brothers business is PPE for the fire industry, ,Fire, Rescue, extrication and disaster. On day one of the new job he asked me to design a glove for me, for extrication. Using and trying everything from Mechanics wear, Ringer, Craftsman and everything in between I made my own, and call them BOSS. (Best Offensive Safety Solution) They are mostly rubberized kevlar cut resistant with Litex, that is heat resistant on the palm inner fingers to 700 degrees. They are lite weight and work well, you can remove a hot spark plug with no problem. or work a chain saw or anything else. With that said, I'll get yo a pair in 3 XL N/C, just email me , see below or PM (don't go on everyday) your address, and stay safe.
MIagiman1@aol.com

The Following User Says Thank You to MIAGIMAN For This Useful Post:
  #10  
Old 05-14-2024, 06:30 PM
ta6point6's Avatar
ta6point6 ta6point6 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: CO
Posts: 221
Default

Believe it or not most people have MRSA on their skin I think it is 1 out or 3. Most of the time it is harmless other times all it take is a cut or scrape in your skin. I wear gloves all the time when working outside mainly because I am a slight germaphobe. If I get any cut or scrap I dump 91% alcohol on it, feel the burn. If you had surgery and infected popped up there is a higher chance it will happen again for the next surgery.
Another thing to get checked with swollen digits hand or feet is gout

__________________
going bandit-Reynolds style
  #11  
Old 05-14-2024, 10:23 PM
433lemans's Avatar
433lemans 433lemans is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Near Sioux Falls SD
Posts: 217
Default

From Mayo Clinic:
"Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection is caused by a type of staph bacteria that's become resistant to many of the antibiotics used to treat ordinary staph infections."
I didn't know so I looked it up. Sounds nasty!

The Following User Says Thank You to 433lemans For This Useful Post:
  #12  
Old 05-14-2024, 11:39 PM
Baron Von Zeppelin Baron Von Zeppelin is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 8,509
Default

I've got more kinds of gloves than I have fingers.
Gloves for everything , and I'm not a germaphobe by any stretch.

The blue nitrile are best fitting for delicate dirty stuff , but pretty much one and done.
The clear vinyl can be taken off and used again repeatedly , like mixing paint or stuff where you want them off a while and on a while.

Learned and saw others in paint & body business who didn't wear gloves while cleaning their guns or mixing spreading bondo. Awful looking permanently stained.
And "washed" their hands in lacquer thinner afterwards.
In the winter their knuckle bends would dry-cack and bleed.
Then washing their hands in thinner was like sticking them in a fire with the dry-cracks.
" I CANT WEAR GLOVES and do anything with my hands "

Barage of gloves for all other mechanical and outdoor tasks.
I wear Large.
3XL is probably way more challenging.

Wishes for a full recovery to you.

The Following User Says Thank You to Baron Von Zeppelin For This Useful Post:
  #13  
Old Yesterday, 01:30 AM
besserspat besserspat is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Montreal
Posts: 185
Default

I never worn gloves for anything mechanical, home building work or dirt work. Until recently...

A friend of mine helped my doing some heavy lifting at my shop recently and he bought for everyone, those cheap lime green cotton gloves with the thick rubber dipped palm and fingers.

He really insisted for me to wear em , since he was nice enough to come help me and spend his money to buy them gloves for everyone, I just shut up and wore em.

Well , those definitely made the job easier on my little callous hands lol and now I use em from time to time, but just when no one is watching ...lol.

That said what stresses me a little more is the permeability of our skin to petroleum and other chemical products. As I get old and more friends get cancer around me, I try to not push my luck.

I dont siphon gas with my mouth anymore, I even look away when i get gasoline drafts while pumping my gas at the station. No more washing parts in gasoline without wearing gloves either.

It just reminds me of the "good" ole days of DDT when everyone sprayed that **** in the neighborhood , while kids played outside the house... lets not even talk about leaded gasoline...

I guess we learn something new everyday.

Peter


Last edited by besserspat; Yesterday at 01:48 AM.
The Following User Says Thank You to besserspat For This Useful Post:
  #14  
Old Yesterday, 06:38 AM
sdbob sdbob is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Latrobe,Pa. USA
Posts: 2,566
Default

Wow! My father when we were working together would say ,'toughen up'. Last week I had a swollen finger right above the nail. Red tender pcp gave me a antibiotic seemed to work. I have a part time job at a machine shop buffing inconel parts for nuclear reactors. What gloves should I buy? I'm mowing grass with CC tractor. Shoveling stone and dirt at home. Going to pour large concrete slab. Gloves ? I'm 75-76

  #15  
Old Yesterday, 12:12 PM
433lemans's Avatar
433lemans 433lemans is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Near Sioux Falls SD
Posts: 217
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sdbob View Post
Wow! My father when we were working together would say ,'toughen up'. Last week I had a swollen finger right above the nail. Red tender pcp gave me a antibiotic seemed to work. I have a part time job at a machine shop buffing inconel parts for nuclear reactors. What gloves should I buy? I'm mowing grass with CC tractor. Shoveling stone and dirt at home. Going to pour large concrete slab. Gloves ? I'm 75-76
Definitely non-permeable gloves. Many people don't realize that you can get severe chemical burns from wet concrete. Some people can do concrete work their whole lives without it happening to them but it can affect some with their first contact. I've seen it.

The Following User Says Thank You to 433lemans For This Useful Post:
  #16  
Old Yesterday, 12:31 PM
RAJ7395's Avatar
RAJ7395 RAJ7395 is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: Peoria, Illinois USA
Posts: 1,665
Default

Just remember to NEVER use glove when you are operating a rotating mill, lathe, or drill press!!

__________________
1969 TA RAIII M40 Auto Cameo White/ Std Blue Int
1970 TA RAIII M21 4-spd Lucy Blue/Std Black Int
1971 TA 455 HO M22 4-Spd Lucy Blue/Deluxe White Int
The Following User Says Thank You to RAJ7395 For This Useful Post:
  #17  
Old Yesterday, 02:27 PM
besserspat besserspat is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Montreal
Posts: 185
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RAJ7395 View Post
Just remember to NEVER use glove when you are operating a rotating mill, lathe, or drill press!!
Yep learned the hard way when I was 18 on a good.ole Bridgeport mill. The end of my right index finger got chewed off, my foreman almost passed out when I removed the rest of the glove.

The sewn it back on, so I dont scare the ladies with a chopped finger and I could pick my nose again, but it feels like a stranger is doing it since I cant feel anything with that finger....

Peter

The Following User Says Thank You to besserspat For This Useful Post:
  #18  
Old Today, 12:13 AM
hurryinhoosier62 hurryinhoosier62 is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Floyd Co., IN/SE KY
Posts: 3,940
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 433lemans View Post
From Mayo Clinic:
"Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection is caused by a type of staph bacteria that's become resistant to many of the antibiotics used to treat ordinary staph infections."
I didn't know so I looked it up. Sounds nasty!
It IS! I’m susceptible to staph after having it as a child( how stupid do you have to be to put a geriatric patient with staph filled bedsores into the pediatric ward with a seven year old…me and a 14 year old…my oldest sister; both with open surgical wounds?) I got the worst of the infections; for five years I had to take 3 million units of penicillin a month. If I had an outbreak it was 3 million units of penicillin per WEEK until the outbreak went away. MRSA is far worse than any other form of staph.

__________________
“It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.”

Dr. Thomas Sowell
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:59 AM.

 

About Us

The PY Online Forums is the largest online gathering of Pontiac enthusiasts anywhere in the world. Founded in 1991, it was also the first online forum for people to gather and talk about their Pontiacs. Since then, it has become the mecca of Pontiac technical data and knowledge that no other place can surpass.

 




Copyright © 2017