An antiseptic is an antimicrobial substance or compound that is applied to living tissue to reduce the possibility of infection, sepsis, or putrefaction. Antiseptics are generally distinguished from antibiotics by the latter's ability to safely destroy bacteria within the body, and from disinfectants, which destroy microorganisms found on non-living objects.
Antibacterials include antiseptics that have the proven ability to act against bacteria. Microbicides which destroy virus particles are called viricides or antivirals. Antifungals, also known as antimycotics, are pharmaceutical fungicides used to treat and prevent mycosis (fungal infection).
Surgery
The widespread introduction of antiseptic surgical methods was initiated by the publishing of the paper Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery in 1867 by Joseph Lister, which was inspired by Louis Pasteur's germ theory of putrefaction. In this paper, Lister advocated the use of carbolic acid (phenol) as a method of ensuring that any germs present were killed. Some of this work was anticipated by:
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Ancient Greek physicians Galen (c. 130–200) and Hippocrates (c. 400 BC) as well as Sumerian clay tablets dating from 2150 BC that advocate the use of similar techniques.
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Medieval surgeons Hugh of Lucca, Theoderic of Servia, and his pupil Henri de Mondeville were opponents of Galen's opinion that pus was important to healing, which had led ancient and medieval surgeons to let pus remain in wounds. They advocated draining and cleaning the wound edges with wine, dressing the wound after suturing, if necessary and leaving the dressing on for ten days, soaking it in warm wine all the while, before changing it. Their theories were bitterly opposed by Galenist Guy de Chauliac and others trained in the classical tradition.
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Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., who published The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever in 1843
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Florence Nightingale, who contributed substantially to the report of the Royal Commission on the Health of the Army (1856–1857), based on her earlier work
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Ignaz Semmelweis, who published his work The Cause, Concept and Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever in 1861, summarizing experiments and observations since 1847
Some common antiseptics
Antiseptics can be subdivided into about eight classes of materials. These classes can be subdivided according to their mechanism of action: small molecules that indiscriminately react with organic compounds and kill microorganisms (peroxides, iodine, phenols) and more complex molecules that disrupt the cell walls of the bacteria.
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Phenols such as phenol itself (as introduced by Lister) and triclosan, hexachlorophene, chlorocresol, and chloroxylenol. The latter is used for skin disinfection and cleaning surgical instruments. It is also used within a number of household disinfectants and wound cleaners.
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Diguanides including chlorhexidine gluconate, a bacteriocidal antiseptic which (with an alcoholic solvent) is the most safe & effective antiseptic for reducing the risk of infection after clean surgery, including tourniquet-controlled upper limb surgery. It is also used in mouthwashes to treat inflammation of the gums (gingivitis). Polyhexanide (polyhexamethylene biguanide, PHMB) is an antimicrobial compound suitable for clinical use in critically colonized or infected acute and chronic wounds. The physicochemical action on the bacterial envelope prevents or impedes the development of resistant bacterial strains.
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Quinolines such as hydroxyquinolone, dequalium chloride, or chlorquinaldol.
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Alcohols, including ethanol and 2-propanol/isopropanol are sometimes referred to as surgical spirit. They are used to disinfect the skin before injections, among other uses.
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Peroxides, such as hydrogen peroxide and benzoyl peroxide. Commonly, 3% solutions of hydrogen peroxide have been used in household first aid for scrapes, etc. However, the strong oxidization causes scar formation and increases healing time during fetal development.
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Iodine, especially in the form of povidone-iodine, is widely used because it is well tolerated; does not negatively affect wound healing; leaves a deposit of active iodine, thereby creating the so-called "remnant", or persistent effect; and has wide scope of antimicrobial activity. The traditional iodine antiseptic is an alcohol solution (called tincture of iodine) or as Lugol's iodine solution. Some studies do not recommend disinfecting minor wounds with iodine because of concern that it may induce scar tissue formation and increase healing time. However, concentrations of 1% iodine or less have not been shown to increase healing time and are not otherwise distinguishable from treatment with saline. Iodine will kill all principal pathogens and, given enough time, even spores, which are considered to be the most difficult form of microorganisms to be inactivated by disinfectants and antiseptics.
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Octenidine dihydrochloride, currently increasingly used in continental Europe, often as a chlorhexidine substitute.
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Quat salts such as benzalkonium chloride/Lidocaine (trade name Bactine among others), cetylpyridinium chloride, or cetrimide. These surfactants disrupt cell walls.
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I own over 20 Star Wars novels on audiobook.
:bannin:
While you were reading Hegel I was reading the Chuck Wendig Aftermath trilogy. So who has really suffered here?
:gulag:
what are the good ones?
Dark Disciples by Christie Golden is a good read. If you watched The Clone Wars series this novel ties up a plot line that was left when the show was canceled, originally. It follows Assajj Ventress and Quinlan Vos(of Extended Universe fame) as they set out on a mission to assassinate Count Dooku, a former sith assassin and a rebellious jedi knight romance/action-adventure ensues.
In the same vein, but a bit different. Dooku: Jedi Lost by Cavan Scott is a fully produced audio drama with several voice actors participating and extensive sound effects and musical sets. The story is a bit middling but the production quality carries the weight. It follows the story of a young Count Dooku who will grow up with the Jedi and eventually become disillusioned with them. A small unexpected treat with this novel is the hinting at the underlying cosmic horror of the Force. Several strange events occur in Count Dooku's early life that suggests the Dark Side was always surrounding him. The whole thing really reminded me of those great early Star Wars radio dramas.
Out of the movie novelizations Rogue One by Alexander Freed is surprisingly excellent. Where Rogue One the film suffered and bled out on the editing room floor the novelization gets to take its time and flesh out some of these details. Probably better than the film.
Do not touch any of the novelizations of the recent trilogy. They are all trash. The first two movies are fine. The novelizations are unbearable and completely pointless.
The first Thrawn novel in the rebooted series was enjoyable. The second is fun because it has both Darth Vader and Anakin Skywalker teaming up with Thrawn in a narrative that ties the two disparate time periods together. It is held back by having so much of it set in and around Black Spire Outpost, which I guess is the main hub for the Disney World Orlando Star Wars theme park. It's like a tie-in novel for a theme park that I will probably never visit. Kind of odd.
Lords of the Sithby Paul S. Kemp is good. Cham Syndulla is the Star Wars version of Che fighting to liberate Ryloth over and over again and the novel begins with him and his guerilla fighters blowing up Vader and Palapatine's star destroyer.
I didn't particularly care for the Ahsoka novel by E.K. Johnston but Ashley Eckstein is that character and does a great job with the narration. Also, several points have been retconned since it was published so it's not really worth it if you care about the larger narrative stuff.
so weird that the clone wars had those weird cosmic-allegorical episodes then novelists turned that into some eldritch shit . idk if thats old or new canon though
fraid to say i don't have any frame of reference for most this, all i can do is offer that you should read the KOTOR comic because it is nice & good (esp if you're into the game)