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Pyracantha scratches dangerous?
On Thursday, September 10, 1998 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Joanna Holland wrote:
I've just been told of a friend who ended up in hospital on intravenous antibiotics after her arm swelled to gargantuan proportions due to being scratched by a pyracanthus while pruning it. Are pyracanthas poisonous, or do they carry particularly nasty diseases of some sort on their thorns? Is this sort of accident common? Please let me know, as mine needs cutting back badly, but I don't fancy a hospital visit Thanks. -- Joanna Holland ] You may be interested in this article I found while researching firethorn as a passive barrier plant. It may be explanitive, and helpful. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s002380050254 It is a medical paper of 3 cases of people tangling with Pyracantha and the need to inform medical personnel that even small thorns may be still resident within the wound. best of luck, Jim C. |
#3
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Pyracantha scratches dangerous?
On 25/01/2015 21:24, wrote:
On Thursday, September 10, 1998 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Joanna Holland wrote: I've just been told of a friend who ended up in hospital on intravenous antibiotics after her arm swelled to gargantuan proportions due to being scratched by a pyracanthus while pruning it. Are pyracanthas poisonous, or do they carry particularly nasty diseases of some sort on their thorns? Is this sort of accident common? Please let me know, as mine needs cutting back badly, but I don't fancy a hospital visit Thanks. -- Joanna Holland ] You may be interested in this article I found while researching firethorn as a passive barrier plant. It may be explanitive, and helpful. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s002380050254 It is a medical paper of 3 cases of people tangling with Pyracantha and the need to inform medical personnel that even small thorns may be still resident within the wound. best of luck, Jim C. Pyracantha thorns are not poisonous, but they can *sometimes* inflict unpleasant injuries. I live with a Pyracantha hedge which is over 100ft in length and have pruned it many times. I often come away with many scratches, depending on whether I'm doing heavy rejuvenation pruning or a lighter trim. No scratch, however long, has really harmed me. I have once or twice in 35yrs received a thorn in a joint in my finger or hand and these injuries are the worst. The big problem is an infection with inflamation known as Cellulitis and it can be serious. I've had time in hospital myself receiving iv antibiotic injections. It only became this serious because I didn't know what I was dealing with. I now do, and the moment a puncture gives me cause for concern, I call on the doc for antibiotics. There is no reason why you shouldn't tackle your Pyracantha hedge. Although it won't help with Cellulitis, make sure you're up to date with your tetanus injection, wear gloves as much as possible and stop work when you're too tired to concentrate. This is my weakness; I work apparently tireless when my brain should tell me I'm exhausted. I've even had a nasty thorn puncture to a joint, suffered from shock, but refused to stop. I think I'm probably obsessive about my hedge. You can learn from my mistakes. Pyracantha doesn't bite - it's more that weary/foolish gardeners cram their fists in its 'mouth'. Do your job, but take extreme care. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
#4
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Pyracantha scratches dangerous?
On 25/01/15 21:24, wrote:
On Thursday, September 10, 1998 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Joanna Holland wrote: I've just been told of a friend who ended up in hospital on intravenous antibiotics after her arm swelled to gargantuan proportions due to being scratched by a pyracanthus while pruning it. Are pyracanthas poisonous, or do they carry particularly nasty diseases of some sort on their thorns? Is this sort of accident common? Please let me know, as mine needs cutting back badly, but I don't fancy a hospital visit Thanks. -- Joanna Holland ] You may be interested in this article I found while researching firethorn as a passive barrier plant. It may be explanitive, and helpful. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s002380050254 It is a medical paper of 3 cases of people tangling with Pyracantha and the need to inform medical personnel that even small thorns may be still resident within the wound. best of luck, Jim C. Just wondered why you are replying to a 16-years old post! Google groups up to its tricks again... But, just to ensure everyone who gardens is aware of how serious finger infections can be, if you get a finger injury from a thorn and your finger starts to swell and get hot, you /must/ get to your local hospital A & E without delay. This type of finger injury is known as a "felon", and is considered a medical emergency. If you leave it, you risk losing your finger, and maybe more. -- Jeff |
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