#16
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Hydrogen peroxide kills normal cells within the wound — including healthy skin cells and immune cells — and slows blood vessel formation.
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The White Zone is for loading and unloading only. |
#17
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I had an amazingly similar minor crash 2 yrs ago; reaching back to turn on my back light on a foggy AM ride, hit a deep (but not visible until you’re almost on top of it) water valve indentation in the pavement with only one hand on the bars, and before you know it… I’m down. Luckily moving along at only 10-12 mph.
A difference was I suffered some deeper chainring gouges in my right ankle area, but no hip pointer as you’ve experienced. Icing is useful for at least the first 24 hrs. No heat application during the initial couple of days. You’ve got relative anesthesia for skin wounds for 15 min or so, so vigorous spraying and gentle scrubbing with water from your bottle (if you’re close to home, it’s obviously better with more water) immediately after you get up, dust yourself off and utter a few choice words is a very good idea. See a lot of acute injuries in Urgent Care and ‘copious’ irrigation of wounds with good old tap water is our current go-to, although normal saline (0.9% saline slution) is slightly preferred as it’s not hypotonic… less damage to cells. Quote:
The Dermatology folks frown on Neosporin and such (some have an allergy to the antibiotic component in it), so they use a lot of petroleum jelly (aka Vaseline) to apply to wounds. Contrary to the previous ‘let it scab over’ approach, studies show wounds heal faster and with less scarring if kept moist with Tegaderm or Vaseline.
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Old... and in the way. |
#18
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The higher MGO contents are better for medicinal use. https://www.amazon.com/Certified-Hig...01HYIT7PO?th=1 |
#19
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Here's what I've been using for road rash, not sure of the source (i want to say NYCC) but it works very well:
1) Clean 2) Apply xeroform petrolatum gauze directly on the wound. 3) Cover the xf with non adhering dressing pads 4) Apply tegaderm over the entire area to keep everything in place. The key is to layer the right materials in the correct order before applying Tegaderm. Maintenance: Leave until second layer becomes dirty in 3-4 days and repalce (back will need less maintenance). |
#20
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Tegaderm if the wound is going to make a mess, like Dired described above. For smaller wounds, a dab of vaseline and a sterile gauze covering (changed regularly). Both after irrigation/cleaing (but not with hydrogen peroxiee). |
#21
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For larger wounds, I like non-stick pads and Hypafix tape. Very comfortable and breathable.
Hopefully you cleaned the areas well. Best case is asap after injury. A warm shower and a clean washcloth is good. Clean it, let it dry and for the first day or three, neosporin or similar. After that keep it greased and covered until no bleeding on your clothes or it needs protection. Change dressing at least once a day, twice if you are active. Then grease it regularly until healed. Works for me. |
#22
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Day 2 … status update
A little goopy, but all contained in the Tergaderm. I’ll clean and redress tonight.
It’s not as sore around the joint and mobility is coming back slowly. Weight bearing is working - yes! Still think another day+ of “easy does it” is warranted. Besides, isn’t Fall when you take your enforced break? Last year it was my recovery from open heart surgery. This is a lot less crisis inducing! Thanks all MB |
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