Another...your tank can be dangerous thread.

Do you wash your hands after you put them in your tank? Just curious i do, Bacteria is everywhere some really bad if folks new what lived in public restrooms they might wanna bring their aqua-gloves in there too. Hepatitis is way worse than an infected thumb, aids way nasty all live in human secretions for several hours. Hand washing removes 99.7% of bacteria. The only reason to wear gloves is if you have an open wound. Education=good, paranoia=bad. IMO!:)
 
When I first started this hobby, I used the same gloves shown above (blue sleeve with orange glove), but after a few times they started leaking at the seam where the sleeve meets the glove. I would have as much water in the gloves as I did in the tank. Didn't seem like it was much "safer," so I haven't used them again. Maybe I got a bad pair?
 
Ouch! I'm glad you're ok and still have two thumbs:thumbsup:.

I Googled rocephin (Ceftriaxone), it's a broad spectrum cephalosporin antibiotic. I guess if that was the only med they gave you and you showed improvement then what you had was a bacterial infection and not mycobacterium marinum.
 
i have a question, i know its bad to put your hands in the tank but what if you get some of the water in your mouth. i know it sounds crazy. i was getting my siphon going the other day and wasnt paying 100% attention to it and some got in my mouth, could that also cause some serious harm???
 
I wouldn't have used the word "absolutely" so freely.

But generally not much to worry about.
 
Geesh, that looked scary as hell! Glad you are OK now...I need to get some gloves, but those orange and blue ones are impossible to work in and they usually leak. I am afraid to stick my hands down into my rockwork and Xenia on the 300g stock tank...too many 24" worms and other nasties that may bite or sting me...not to mention the toxic bacterias, etc.

Thanks for the update too.


Dave
 
I'm so sorry for the ordeal you went through. We just don't realize the things in our tanks that can harm us. Gloves are a wonderful precaution. That last pic is still kinda gross but it really does look looks muuuuuch better than the first two. Be thankful to have a thumb!
Take care of your self.:)
 
|2AIN said:
i have a question, i know its bad to put your hands in the tank but what if you get some of the water in your mouth. i know it sounds crazy. i was getting my siphon going the other day and wasnt paying 100% attention to it and some got in my mouth, could that also cause some serious harm???

I've gotten lots of water in my mouth surfing in the ocean here. Considering all the pig poop and stuff that comes floating down the rivers I haven't died yet :)
Used to siphon the qt tanks for turtles at the aquarium, loaded with turtle poo after three or four days. couple times I got a mouthful of turtle poo water. Walked away from that too, although I was quite worried about salmonella, I just rinsed my mouth and was fine.
Mike
 
I agree that the hospital lab probably did not know how to culture a marine organism or recognize one when they saw one.

People who swim in the ocean get sea water in their mouths all the time, no problem. Even though the mouth is a warm moist mucus membrany surface. Probably shouldn't drink seawater, though.

Most likely source of infection is contact with poison or bacteria that colonize in a nice juicy cut or abrasion. Contact being the operative word. I am guessing that if one wore gloves while handling the zo's and anemones and rocks for that matter, it would not matter if there was tank water inside the gloves. Contact with the toxins , bacteria, and sharp stuff would be greatly diminished just by having that layer of latex or whatever between you and the solid objects in your tank. Sure there is bacteria in the water, but at reduced concentrations compared to the surface of rock etc. Dose is everything.

Probably a good idea to get the kind of gloves without powder or aloe or anything else inside. I am guessing short ones getting wet all over would be easier to manage than long ones that leak.

Just my opinion. Don't bet your life on it. If I were the guy with the thumb, I would never let my hands get wet again.
 
Wow Sean,

That's a pretty grusome ordeal. As you probably read a thousand times on NCfrag - I'm gonna be moving my tank. Looks like I'll be grabbing some gloves!!

Good timing on your warning!
 
Hand washing removes 99.7% of bacteria.

This ones not true IMO. I remember an experiment I did in microbiology with 5 different types of soaps, even anti-bacterial ones. You could still grow a culture of bacteria from a swab taken from your hands immediately after washing them. Maybe if your soaked your hands in bleach.

I'm sure washing your hands helps, but if the bacteria get in through a cut it's very hard to get them all back out simply by washing the area.

I've worked in zoos, as an aquarium service guy and had tanks for awhile now. I've never worn gloves and have never had any problems. Although I have to say I would wear gloves if my thumb ever looked like that!
 
Sounds like it should have been your day to buy a winning lottery ticket/get hit by lightning or some other millions to one shot type thing. Of all the people that have read and replied to your thread no one else has had that kind of experience. Glad you still have 2 thumbs. Good idea to share your experience, never would have thought something like that was possible, but
 
hehee, thanks for posting Sean.
I was trying to get a frag of something away from my Palythoa last night, when I felt my finger brush up against it (yeah, the one w/ the hangnail)...

I wouldn't be typing this if I'd gotten it in me, but you've given me yet another reminder, to stop being so stupid.

- Mac
 
Not to take away from your story, but our reef club went on a collecting trip in Port Aransas a few weeks ago, and when we got home news broke that two fishermen that were fishing in a tournament not far from where we were collecting became infected with Vibrio. One man waited one day later than the other to seek medical treatment and he is on the brink of death, having had both legs amputated already.

There are more cases being confirmed too.

http://outdoorsbest.zeroforum.com/zerothread?&id=234570

Very scary stuff!!! I'm glad you're okay, Sean.

~ Sherri
 
Wow, glad you are ok.

I wonder if the lump I had near my elbow last year was bacteria from the fish tank. It got harder and larger till the point I went to the doctor and he said that it was my lymph node. He noticed that I had a few small cuts on my hands and said that I had probably been exposed to bacteria and that it probably entered throught the cuts on my hand. He mentioned that he had seen streaking on some people that led to lymph nodes when it was a bacteria. I did not even think to mention the tank because I had not seen any of the bacteria threads then.

Glad that you are ok Sean!!
 
I wouldn't have used the word "absolutely" so freely

I say again, absolutely. I would like to see one documented case of salwater aquarium water doing any damage after getting into someones mouth. You wont find it. There is no need to be so paranoid around an aquarium.
 
Not quite so fast.

True, not human, but there is a board member here who lost his dog due to poisoning from some zoos.
 
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