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Our UVC Kill List is long and impressive, testament to how good UV light at this special wavelength is at killing pathogens and other infectious agents stone dead, fast. This time we’re taking a tour of two spores you really don’t want in your life: Bacillus anthracis - also known as Anthrax - and Clostridioides difficile - also called C. Diff.
Protect your business with our UVC hygiene units and if either of these horrors finds its way indoors, it won’t be able to make employees ill or put your customers at risk.
Anthrax can cause severe illness in people and animals, and the bacterium that causes it lives naturally in the soil everywhere on our planet. It usually gets passed onto humans via infected animals or contaminated animal products. Maybe you breathe anthrax spores in, eat food or drink water contaminated with the spores, or it finds its way under your skin via a graze or cut.
The type of illness that develops depends on how the anthrax spores get into your body in the first place: the skin, lungs, or gastrointestinal system. If left untreated, however it gets in, the illness can kill.
Cutaneous Anthrax happens when the spores get into a cut or graze and under the skin, often when someone’s handling animal wool, hair or hide. This is the commonest and also the least dangerous type of infection. First you see itchy blisters or bumps, then a big swelling at the source of the infection followed by large painless circular lumps with an ugly black centre on the face, arms hands or neck.
Gastrointestinal Anthrax is caught by eating raw or undercooked meat from an infected animal, and it’s relatively rare in the West. It affects the throat, oesophagus, stomach and intestines. You get fever and chills, swollen neck glands and a sore throat, which give way to hoarseness, nausea and vomiting or bloody vomit, diarrhea or bloody diarrhea, a headache, red face and eyes, a painful swollen stomach and fainting spells.
Inhalation Anthrax happens when you breathes anthrax spores into your lungs, the most deadly type of all and found in workplaces like mills, slaughterhouses and tanneries. It starts off in the lymph nodes in the chest then spreads to the rest of the body. You first get fever and chills, then heavy sweating followed by a painful chest and a cough or difficulties breathing. Confusion, dizziness, head and body aches, then nausea and vomiting, stomach pains and extreme exhaustion follow.
Welder’s Anthrax has only just been discovered, a rare disease found in metalworkers. It causes serious pneumonia and can be fatal, kicking off with fever, chills, a sudden cough and chest pain, leading to breathing difficulties and even coughing up blood.
However you catch it, anthrax can show up anything from just one day to two months after exposure, which sometimes makes it a challenge to pin down the source.
C. diff causes diarrhea and inflammation of the colon, and it too can be deadly. It can infect anyone of any age and mostly turns up when you've been taking antibiotics for something else. It’s the biggest cause of infectious diarrhea in hospitalised people.
You’re as much as 10 times more likely to get C. diff while on antibiotics and for a month afterwards.
Because antibiotics kill all bacteria, not just the dangerous ones, the worst infections are given a window of opportunity to thrive. The longer you take antibiotics the greater the risk of catching C. Diff, and people aged over 65 and those with a compromised immune system are at the most risk.
The bacterium causes around 14,000 cases a year in the UK and one in six people get it for a second time 2-8 weeks later. One in eleven people die within a month of having the disease. Diarrhea, fever and a tender or painful stomach join a poor appetite and nausea to make you feel awful. In a serious case the complications include dehydration, colitis, toxic megacolon or even sepsis, which can kill.
Found in excrement as well as floating around in the indoor environment, the dormant spores can last for years. Only when they get inside the intestines do they activate to cause illness. It’s treated with special antibiotics like vancomycin or fidaxomicin, taken for at least 10 days. You might have to go to hospital and if you’ve had it once, you can easily get it several more times.
C. diff tends to turn up in healthcare settings like hospitals and nursing homes, which is why so many healthcare businesses already use UVC light to keep patients, staff and visitors safe.
Low cost, easy to fit, low on energy use with little or no maintenance, our UVC units are proven to kill both of these nasties in minutes, in the air and on every surface the light touches. If your business could be affected by either disease, get in touch for an inspiring conversation about killing both of them along with a multitude more spores, bacteria, viruses and moulds.