Re: Is there anyway to disinfect a reptile cage without moving the cage?
The thing is, how much of a disinfection do you want to do?
Chlorhexidine is good stuff, but it doesnt kill hardly anything.
I like the F10 and Trifectant because it kills the really nasty stuff
Not even the more expensive Nolvasan aka Chlorhexidine Diacetate will kill the ever popular Pseudomonas infections which are a typical bacteria found in Respiratory Infections.
Long story short, Chlorhexidine Gluconate, the cheaper stuff, will work in between your heavy cleanings, but for my own piece of mind, Id use something tougher every once in a while.
Re: Is there anyway to disinfect a reptile cage without moving the cage?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
2kdime
The thing is, how much of a disinfection do you want to do?
Chlorhexidine is good stuff, but it doesnt kill hardly anything.
I like the F10 and Trifectant because it kills the really nasty stuff
Not even the more expensive Nolvasan aka Chlorhexidine Diacetate will kill the ever popular Pseudomonas infections which are a typical bacteria found in Respiratory Infections.
Long story short, Chlorhexidine Gluconate, the cheaper stuff, will work in between your heavy cleanings, but for my own piece of mind, Id use something tougher every once in a while.
Weird...I've been using it for years with no issues....everything I've read and heard seems to jive with what's posted here: http://www.edmontonreptiles.com/foru...ad.php?t=18489
Do you have any links that contradict that info? I've searched and haven't been able to find much info...or at least info I could understand...
This seems to be the general consensus..."Chlorhexidine Gluconate, exceptionally persistent and broad spectrum antimicrobial properties have led to its recognition as the most effective agent available for surgical scrubbing, hand washing, patient pre-op prepping and skin wound cleansing." Seems like it would clean a tub fairly well...?
Re: Is there anyway to disinfect a reptile cage without moving the cage?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OhhWatALoser
I just use white vinegar
mmmm...NC BBQ!
Re: Is there anyway to disinfect a reptile cage without moving the cage?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
2kdime
The thing is, how much of a disinfection do you want to do?
Chlorhexidine is good stuff, but it doesnt kill hardly anything.
I like the F10 and Trifectant because it kills the really nasty stuff
Not even the more expensive Nolvasan aka Chlorhexidine Diacetate will kill the ever popular Pseudomonas infections which are a typical bacteria found in Respiratory Infections.
Long story short, Chlorhexidine Gluconate, the cheaper stuff, will work in between your heavy cleanings, but for my own piece of mind, Id use something tougher every once in a while.
Sorry for the small bit of a hijack here...
Can you give me a reference to this? I can't find anything that supports your statement. I am well aware of the importance of the CHGs concentration but my understanding is that even at lower concentrations it was effective against a grab bag of nasties (why it is use in many hospitals as a surgical scrub)
I can find lots of references where it is used in products but little when used on its own.
I would be very very interested in your information sources. (chem geek sorry)
Here is things I am finding...
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retri...95670195901523
that is at 4% which is hard to get and makes it wicked expensive... 70$ a gal.
http://www.ecolabhealthcare.com/docs/Endure_400_PSD.pdf
This is actually the soap I use. during my monthly cleaning again 4%
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15655906
This is a Japanese study that is at very low % but the time is a big factor.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8486975
another Japanese study about developing resistance to CHG which seems low.
This is far from solid support but it leads me to feel that CHG is actually fairly good but that is an assumption based on incomplete information I am not arguing with you at all, I just don't have enough information to make any kind of informed statement, I hope you can pass along a reference so I can read more on the matter.
Alex