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sambroadley
Sep 16, 2010, 6:54 PM
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i am going climbing outdoors on saturday and a have a blister on the end of my finger since monday after buring myself souldering (if thats how you spell it). its better than it was but wonderd what to do ...fast!
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Lbrombach
Sep 16, 2010, 6:57 PM
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I bet it'll be perfectly tolerable by saturday.
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shoo
Sep 16, 2010, 6:58 PM
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sambroadley wrote: i am going climbing outdoors on saturday and a have a blister on the end of my finger since monday after buring myself souldering (if thats how you spell it). its better than it was but wonderd what to do ...fast! Cut off the finger.
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jbro_135
Sep 16, 2010, 6:58 PM
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hope it heals? then tape it?
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sambroadley
Sep 16, 2010, 7:11 PM
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should i pop it if it has NOT improved on saturday?
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drector
Sep 16, 2010, 7:23 PM
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sambroadley wrote: i am going climbing outdoors on saturday and a have a blister on the end of my finger since monday after buring myself souldering ( if thats how you spell it). its better than it was but wonderd what to do ...fast! http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=souldering It would be just as quick to look it up and then know it for the rest of your life than to type "if thats how you spell it"[sic] in your message.
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tehbillzor
Sep 16, 2010, 8:44 PM
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Having experienced numerous soldering and welding burns i would recommend trying to climb on it the way it is, and only pop and tape it if you feel it will help you. It is always better to leave blisters closed rather than open.
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fxgranite
Sep 17, 2010, 12:10 AM
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tehbillzor wrote: Having experienced numerous soldering and welding burns i would recommend trying to climb on it the way it is, and only pop and tape it if you feel it will help you. It is always better to leave blisters closed rather than open. I always lance mine especially if the blister is in a spot that is likely to be hit again. I reason that it is better for me to lance it under mostly sterile conditions rather than to have it tear open somewhere. I've found that the dead skin on top can actually reattach fairly well too if you do it right. If someone with some medical experience could chime in I'd be interested to hear a response. A quick interwebz search yields both sides of the argument. The only pro leave-it-alone stuff I can find revolve around keeping it from getting infected, which is not hard to do if you're careful and lance it.
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altelis
Sep 18, 2010, 5:20 PM
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fxgranite wrote: tehbillzor wrote: Having experienced numerous soldering and welding burns i would recommend trying to climb on it the way it is, and only pop and tape it if you feel it will help you. It is always better to leave blisters closed rather than open. I always lance mine especially if the blister is in a spot that is likely to be hit again. I reason that it is better for me to lance it under mostly sterile conditions rather than to have it tear open somewhere. I've found that the dead skin on top can actually reattach fairly well too if you do it right. If someone with some medical experience could chime in I'd be interested to hear a response. A quick interwebz search yields both sides of the argument. The only pro leave-it-alone stuff I can find revolve around keeping it from getting infected, which is not hard to do if you're careful and lance it. So you lance something that has a protective cover under "mostly sterile conditions", so it can then be open without full cover to mostly unsterile conditions? Not saying your tactic is wrong, your reasoning just seems sorta screwy...
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Lbrombach
Sep 19, 2010, 12:56 PM
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I lance almost all of my blisters... you get some usage back immediately. The tiny hole is self-sealing in short order, and before that you just put a dab of neosporin and a bandaid on it. The important thing is that when you lance you keep things clean like the man said, that's when any micro-ickys on the needle would be introduced far beyond the outermost part of the skin. Yeah - any Doc will tell you to let stuff heal on it's own, you could die of infection, the fluid is there to lubricate and promote healing, blah blah blah...but those prudes also tell us not to run with scissors.
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altelis
Sep 19, 2010, 7:57 PM
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Like I had said, I had always been taught (by friends, instructors, in WFA/WFR/WEMT courses) that if the probability was high that the blister would pop you should lance and drain a blister. And the reasoning is often, though not always, that you should lance it in as sterile conditions as possible to help prevent infection, similar to the reasoning you gave. This never really sat well with me. The advice, to lance them, seemed right but the reasoning always seemed funny. So I did a brief literature search, and it seems the reasoning offered is NOT correct. Most articles came out of adventure racing or the military, and most articles did recommend lancing a blister. And infection was kind of a reason, but not at all how you explained. Seems that the best way to promote healing and to ward off infection is to leave the floor and roof of the blister intact. The more intact the faster the healing and the less chance for infection. Contrary to what I would have thought, good apposition of the roof and floor helps with healing. Having the roof present and apposed does increase healing time, suggesting its not just a "dead lump of skin" Similar idea, but not quite the same. Interestingly, the "course of treatment" most often encouraged was to EITHER lance and drain the blister once within the 1st 24 hrs or twice within 24-36. If the blisters tears or the roof cannot otherwise be kept intact after lancing, its best to remove the entirety of the roof. And keep them covered. Esp for foot blisters, keeping them covered with similar tactics used in blister prevention, also helped encourage healing, promote good apposition of the tissue, and minimized infection. Cool stuff.
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tehbillzor
Sep 20, 2010, 4:32 PM
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sambroadley wrote: i am going climbing outdoors on saturday and a have a blister on the end of my finger since monday after buring myself souldering (if thats how you spell it). its better than it was but wonderd what to do ...fast! so what did you end up doing?
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