So here's an interesting statistic... The average person has 0.14 grams of feces on their rear end. If a person does not shower prior to swimming, that 0.14 grams of stool gets washed off into the swimming pool. Kids tend to have a bit more stool on their rear end (up to 10 grams). See references below. That means if 100 individuals enter the swimming pool in any given day without showering beforehand, anywhere from 14 grams to 1 kilogram of stool enter the swimming pool water (0.03 - 2…
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Showing posts with label fecal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fecal. Show all posts
July 19, 2013
May 31, 2013
Do Nosebleeds Cause Stool Blood Tests to Become Positive?
- at 5/31/2013
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
As a general rule, an ordinary nosebleed will not cause a screening stool blood test (hemoccult or guaiac) to come back positive. However, if the nosebleed is bad enough to consider going to the emergency room... and you are swallowing a lot of it... only than will it be likely that such stool tests will come back positive for blood. To be precise, such stool tests turn positive only if there's at least 2+ teaspoons of blood leaking into the digestive system everyday (or swallowed…
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May 02, 2013
Fecal Transplantation Administered Through the NOSE!
- at 5/02/2013
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Fecal transplant is nothing new as it has been around since the 1950's... It is used to treat multi-drug resistant clostridium dificile infection by replacing the "bad" gut bacteria with normal "good" bacteria. However, what is new is the fact that such fecal transplantation is being administered through the nose using a tube threaded into the small bowel. [Thanks to @GuildfordENT who brought this to my attention!] Historically, such fecal transplantation (aka fec…
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September 23, 2012
How is Sinusitis Like Diarrhea, Germs and All?
- at 9/23/2012
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
A normal human body is composed of more "bacteria" cells than "human" cells. Indeed, the bacteria collectively living inside a normal healthy person would fill a half-gallon jug; numerically, there are probably 10 times more bacterial cells in the body than human cells. Though the majority of these bacteria have no known effect on the human body (good or bad), some of these organisms perform tasks that participate in maintaining health and are deemed necessary members o…
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