Sealed with CA

Keith Willis

Well-Known Member
I was reading the papers that were sent home with me
from the hospital.I am sure to some of you already new
and it may well be an old way of doing things,I have used
CA many times on cuts,and unstababilized wood,but to me
the use of it in the medical field was new.Just thought I would post it.
I again posted the hardware that was taken out,not much to it
to be causing the problems I was having.

God bless,Keith
 
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Hi Keith hope you feel better my friend. They must have gave you hell at airport security with that in your back :biggrin::lol:
 
Glad to hear you're out of the hospital, Keith. I hope you are able to find relief from the pain now. It will be interesting to see how much their CA costs.
 
Welcome back....hope all went well and will be well.

Now Keith, how are you going to incorporate that clamp thingy into knifemaking ?

Welcome back,
Rudy
 
Kind of amazing what all super glue is used for, huh Keith? I spent 4 hrs in the ER a couple of years ago with a lacerated thumb thinking they were going to stitch me up. The doctor came in and rubbed super glue on it and then wrapped a butterfly over it. I wonder how much that cost my insurance company?

Gald to see you back on and hope things are going well for you. Be sure to take it easy and get a full recovery. If you need anything, give me a shout.
 
Thanks Pieter.
Do you think it would set off at the airport?:les:

Thanks Denny,it will be very interesting.:eek:

Thanks Rudy,I'll have to think a little while on that one,any suggestion?:les:

Thanks Murph,and yes this would be very interesting to see the cost.:what!:

God bless,Keith
 
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C?A glues were developed for the medical feild consider this all the over the counter C/A glues are weakened version of the medical grade glues with nasty additives so you will not use it as a medical glue. Dermaseal is the big brand name a look at the cost tell you something is up and it is not about label ego either.
 
Yep, Superglues were developed for immediately closing wounds in environments where using needle and thread were a no-go
(like a helicopter medivac).
Only problem was they found out it was highly carcinogenic...
I figure maybe they've reformulated some for present day use...
(fingers crossed).
Glad you're up and about Keith,
just take it easy and let your body tell you what you need to do.
Those pieces,if modified a bit, look like they'd make interesting bolsters,
or incorporate them into handle scales somehow?
At the least,they look like they'd keep a bag of chips sealed and fresh!
:)
 
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