How to wash BJJ Gi?

Clean people are less likely to be infected than dirty people. If you're an environmental science major, then you'd be familiar with the fact that one of the major reasons humans now have such long, enjoyable lives is that there has been a major emphasis on public sanitation.

Really? are you going to compare laundering a gi every session to sewage and clean water?

I'm in the most challenging (most competitive as a student, most difficult in terms of training, etc) aspect of healthcare in terms of education and delivery and I'll take my own knowledge over yours or your wives and wash my clothes

So you are an epidemiologist with emphasis on dermatology? You have studies that discern the process of the spread of a disease in the grappling community? and specifically when it comes to gi? Really? what a coincidence.

You can be a neurosurgeon and a theorical physicist, doesnt means you know about something you shouldnt be knowing, and the Ad Hominem was only to make sure that you actually understand what's a scientific study, what its a confidence interval and what its experimental designs.

The burden of proof is on your side.

My education > hers. No offense, but it is MUCH, MUCH, MUCH more difficult to get where I am today than where either you or your wife are.

Actually no, your education means that you and i can understand scientific articles.

Getting to graduate from Harvard Law School is hard as fuck, doesnt means they know everything. Again Ad Hominem was only to determine something, that if i ask for as scientific article im not going to get something out a palmolive webpage.

So where are the studies?

nd, there is a reason for that. I don't mean to be a jerk, but your ignorance on this topic is frankly dangerous. You might get some silly people to follow your lead, and next thing you know we'll have the MRSA equivalent of the CA whooping cough epidemic, which I attribute to the nonsense spouted off by morons like Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy about vaccinations.

Really? Then show me the evidence. Do you have any study that compared the incidence of skin disease in different 1st world countries?

Let me break it down... even without heat, the washing action will help remove bacteria. In addition, the "detergent" (a term your wife should be familiar with if she's a MS in Micro) will lead to cell membrane destruction of bacteria! (i.e. death) Sure, it's not optimal, but it's better than nothing.

With the same logic then a "defense soap" would be much better to deter exposure than regular soap right? Statistical evidence shows its not and may even have a negative effect.

And, since you like statistics, you should understand how exposure and probability work together. Kills as much bacteria as possible, become less exposed, and be less likely to develop and infection. Easy as that.

If you are really in medicine you should know that there are a gazillions of factors present in everything and that only solid EMPIRICAL evidence is worth a dime.

The amount of "exposure" may or may not be statistically important.

http://www.kalbacher.uni-tuebingen.de/pdf/2001/hk20013.pdf

sweat itself has antibacterial effect and does carries a powerful bactericide. Also the limitation of one form of exposure may not be statistically significant because its overriden by others.

There are millions of considerations to take in place in experimental design and medicine experiments are the hardest of all. The joke is when "doctors" try to pass their beliefs without proper procedure because they are "doctors". Seriously how hard it is? Remember the whole saturated fats are bad, then good, then transfat then they are not, then high protein, low protein, carbs etc etc? And this was the FDA.

Seriously get back in line with other disciplines, yes medicine experiments are hard, but that's a challenge not an excuse.

Again, im not asking for much, just evidence, we can theorize as much as we want seriously, lets get some decent debate and start bringing sources.

Right... and the addition of the Gi (a big, cotton fomite) just makes it all the more likely you'll get an infection. Lots of potentially dangerous, common bugs can survive for MONTHS on unsanitary fomites, like a Gi.

We are not discussing sanitary actions for hospitals filled with people with compromised immunes, we are discussing normal healthy persons.

I have no idea where you're getting the idea that sanitation and cleanliness is pseudoscience. There is a reason Florence Nightengale is so famous.

Again what kind of student is going to try to use an association fallacy between gi frequency and quality of wash and sewage and washing hands before treating wounded?

Really? really?

Again, burden of proof, you haz, i haz not.

GL with your japanese, maybe you will find something in google scholar.
 
Prevention, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Antimicrobial Resistance

"Wash sheets, towels, and clothes that become soiled with water and laundry detergent; use bleach and hot water if possible. Drying clothes in a hot dryer, rather than air-drying, also helps kill bacteria in clothes."

Yes, the general medical community does seem to agree with that. Please read my above post carefully too so you don't miss any other relevant news.

They would also recommend not to grapple, what's the point? what studies are these based on? Are they among healthy or sick people? what its the chance while changing just one factor?

The fact is that Americans who wash every second and burn their clothes are one of the folks with the highest incidence of skin disease in grappling. Some of the "dirtiest" have very low incidence, the fact is that you are trying to link cultural stigmas with actual science through theorical only links that i have yet to see an article about them.

BTW if you actually were a dermatologist you would realize a lot of diseases dont even need physical contact.

In my college the judo guys had gis that were not washed everyday (every week) we grappled and sweat over each other but we never had any disease, the TKD guys had like 2-4 herpes epidemics.

Again, there are other factors involved which have a bigger impact.
 
I liked this post from another forum

Nooo ... you clearly have a cultural issue with a number of things (smell, BO, etc), which you INSIST on linking to disease, and do so inappropriately. How on earth is a smelly gi related to disease ? Please, fill me in.

What causes smell ? Smell is mainly caused by oxidation of sweat from certain sudoriferous glands, espec. those in the genitalia and armpits, as they secrete a different type of sweat than sweat glands elsewhere on your body. Its ingredients, including pheromones, as well as other typical components including Sodium and chloride contribute to smell. This has nothing, but nothing to do whatsoever, with bacteria and viruses, and even less with the transmission of them. Moreover, what you say is blatantly wrong. The skin secretes dermicide. Dermicide is a natural disinfectant that helps protect the human body from infection through bacteria. In fections far more occur via air and humidity (water droplets dissoved in air) from body to body via locations of the body that are not covered with normal skin, i.e. the mucosa of the nose, the mouth, and the genitals (the latter hopefully not during j
 
BTW i wash my gi every week with oxiclean (peroxide) and sun dry if i manage to properly aereate it, i also keep it in a breathable cotton bag and whip it many times after i take it out to aereate it. If for a reason i cant take out my gi after training then ill wash it normally, then do a thorough wash in the weekend.

Sometimes i have had smelly gi, when rolling with someone nasty, because it picks up a bad odor, then i have to have it soak in peroxide for longer and put it in the sun a whole day.

This makes judogis last forever.

Or you can go paranoid and wash at 90C and use copius amount of chlorine and buy a new dogi every 3 months.
 
Also dont wash after every workout, just remember to dry it after you are done.

Well, you do NOT need to wash you gi after every workout as long as you can DRY it properly (sun dry will be the best).
 
Well, you do NOT need to wash you gi after every workout as long as you can DRY it properly (sun dry will be the best).

Agreed, sun kills most bacteria and viruses, they lack protection against UV sunlight unlike us which develop melanin.
 
Say that to people who only have one gi and train everyday in third world countries.

Judogis dont smell if you hang them after training. I wash my judogi once a week and hang dry, never has it developed a smell.

Problem arises when bacteria or mildew manage to get in the judogi (rolling with a dirty fella) then the moment sweat comes in the game they flourish, but nothing a good old sun dry and/or adding a spoon of ammonia in the cycle.

When i started training i only had one judogi and trained day and night so i didnt had time to wash and dry, and i was well off with a good washing machine, most didnt had washing machines that could handle good double weaves so they had to handwash which in a thick double weaves takes as much as 2 days to dry when handwashed.

And in 6 years of training hard sweating over a gallon (weighted in and after training), and over 100 degrees with 80-100 humidity, not a single case of ringworm or staph.

The dude said he just got 2 shoyoroll gis, so a) he has more than one gi b) asked how to wash it in the machine so he obviously has one and c) the shoyorolls aren't double weaves by any stretch of the imagination
 
Really? are you going to compare laundering a gi every session to sewage and clean water?
How is it different? I mean, in the big scheme of things the point of sewage removal is to reduce our exposure to potential pathogens. Where do these pathogens come from? Uhhhh, us, often.

So you are an epidemiologist with emphasis on dermatology? You have studies that discern the process of the spread of a disease in the grappling community? and specifically when it comes to gi? Really? what a coincidence.
Pretty unnecessary to understand basic disease communication. Modes of disease transmission are: human -> fomite -> human, fecal-oral, oral-oral, aerosol, etc, etc. If you're innoculating a fomite with potential pathogens on a daily basis, and they are accumulating, then you're increasing your risk.

I.e. you don't have to do a scientific study to know that if you stick your dick in a blender it hurts. Just like you don't need to do a study specifically about BJJ and Gi's to know that cotton is a fomite, and washing reduces infectious disease load. There are studies that prove both of those things--in fact, cotton swabs are often used as a fomite in microbiology labs and our cotton lab coats are required to be washed after microbiology loabs! Herp derp!

You can be a neurosurgeon and a theorical physicist, doesnt means you know about something you shouldnt be knowing, and the Ad Hominem was only to make sure that you actually understand what's a scientific study, what its a confidence interval and what its experimental designs.

The burden of proof is on your side.
You also don't need to be Einstein to know that force=mass*acceleration.

And, since you're the person suggesting that something "isn't" dangerous, the burden of proof is on YOUR side! The risks of doing what you suggest are higher than doing what we suggest.

Actually no, your education means that you and i can understand scientific articles.
No, my education means I understand scientific articles AND disease processes, transmission, etiology, etc. Your education means that you know how to read scientific articles and environmental science issues.

Getting to graduate from Harvard Law School is hard as fuck, doesnt means they know everything. Again Ad Hominem was only to determine something, that if i ask for as scientific article im not going to get something out a palmolive webpage.

So where are the studies?
Burden of proof is on you, since you're advocating what are widely considered to be unsafe actions. I don't need to prove well-established knowledge o_0

With the same logic then a "defense soap" would be much better to deter exposure than regular soap right? Statistical evidence shows its not and may even have a negative effect.
Yep. That's true. Antibacterial soaps aren't doing you any good people. You're killing off normal flora and allowing for opportunistic infection. But, your Gi isn't your skin and washing with soap isn't the same as washing with antibiotic soap.

So, keep your Gi clean so as not to expose yourself to potential pathogens, and don't kill the protective normal flora of your skin, allowing for opportunistic infections from bacteria such as strep and staph, or fungal tinea infections.

You literally have no idea what you're talking about. I'm sorry, bud, but it's the truth.

If you are really in medicine you should know that there are a gazillions of factors present in everything and that only solid EMPIRICAL evidence is worth a dime.

The amount of "exposure" may or may not be statistically important.

http://www.kalbacher.uni-tuebingen.de/pdf/2001/hk20013.pdf

sweat itself has antibacterial effect and does carries a powerful bactericide. Also the limitation of one form of exposure may not be statistically significant because its overriden by others.
I don't have time to read your article, but it's really nothing new that our body produces antibiotics. We've known that for ages. Just because a novel antibiotic was discovered doesn't mean that innate and acquired immunity to pathogens is a novel concept--it's not. And, if you're so awe-struck with our own natural defenses, I suggest that if you ever get a nasty case of MRSA or cellulitis you let them do their thing without any synthetic antibiotic therapy.

There are millions of considerations to take in place in experimental design and medicine experiments are the hardest of all. The joke is when "doctors" try to pass their beliefs without proper procedure because they are "doctors". Seriously how hard it is? Remember the whole saturated fats are bad, then good, then transfat then they are not, then high protein, low protein, carbs etc etc? And this was the FDA.

Seriously get back in line with other disciplines, yes medicine experiments are hard, but that's a challenge not an excuse.
Nutrition is more complex than infection risk. In addition, people get stuff wrong... such is life. Environmental "scientists" like yourself convinced Australia that they had severe droughts coming b/c of climate change. What happens? Uhh, they just had some of the worst flooding in recent history. Am I to discredit all environmental science now?

Again, im not asking for much, just evidence, we can theorize as much as we want seriously, lets get some decent debate and start bringing sources.
Do it. But, you're advocating potentially dangerous behavior, not me. So, you provide the proof that wearing dirty clothes doesn't increase your risk of infection in an environment where close contact is common. And, for your sake, I'll pretend I've never heard about all of the many nosocomial infections we see in hospitals due to people having unsanitary practices, or fomite transmission.

We are not discussing sanitary actions for hospitals filled with people with compromised immunes, we are discussing normal healthy persons.
Normal people get sick, too. Just less easily. So, if immune compromised patients are getting sick more often b/c of unsanitary pratices (fomite transmission, not washing hands, etc) then normal people are more "likely" to get sick as well. It's simple.

Again what kind of student is going to try to use an association fallacy between gi frequency and quality of wash and sewage and washing hands before treating wounded?

Really? really?

Again, burden of proof, you haz, i haz not.

GL with your japanese, maybe you will find something in google scholar.
Fallacy... *sigh* Whatever man. Don't wash your clothes if you don't want to, but at least be kind enough to inform your training partners.

P.S. I'm glad you've never acquired any infections. However, that's an n=1 experiment and we're worrying about large numbers of people. (As you should know). Just like some people drive their whole lives with no seatbelt on and are just fine, so might others be dirty while they roll BJJ with other dirty people and never acquire any sort of significant dermal infection.
 
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Well, you do NOT need to wash you gi after every workout as long as you can DRY it properly (sun dry will be the best).

Common opportunistic pathogens can live months on dry fomites (such a a cotton gi). So, unless you're sun drying (UV irradiation does kill when applied thoroughly), you're building up a nice collection of potentially infectious agents.
 
Agreed, sun kills most bacteria and viruses, they lack protection against UV sunlight unlike us which develop melanin.

I was told to never spin dry your gi as it "dammages" the gi.

well it was a karate gi but neverless, any opinion on the spin dry?
 
all i want to know is if its safe for me to dry my gi or even just my gi pants in the dryer :[
 
all i want to know is if its safe for me to dry my gi or even just my gi pants in the dryer :[

Most people are concerned with shrinkage when they reference drying 100% cotton apparel, like gi's. If you can't afford any shrinkage, then you probably don't want to use the dryer.
 
They would also recommend not to grapple, what's the point? what studies are these based on? Are they among healthy or sick people? what its the chance while changing just one factor?

The fact is that Americans who wash every second and burn their clothes are one of the folks with the highest incidence of skin disease in grappling. Some of the "dirtiest" have very low incidence, the fact is that you are trying to link cultural stigmas with actual science through theorical only links that i have yet to see an article about them.

BTW if you actually were a dermatologist you would realize a lot of diseases dont even need physical contact.

In my college the judo guys had gis that were not washed everyday (every week) we grappled and sweat over each other but we never had any disease, the TKD guys had like 2-4 herpes epidemics.

Again, there are other factors involved which have a bigger impact.

Yeah, why would I listen to hygiene recommendations from the National Institute of Health? What a bunch of quacks. Instead I should just listen to this dude named Rod1 because his wife has a Master's degree.

I guess the takeaway from this is that Rod1 believes washing machines are a conspiracy perpetrated by the general medical community. I think this belongs in an Eddie Bravo thread somewhere.
 
Say that to people who only have one gi and train everyday in third world countries.

Judogis dont smell if you hang them after training. I wash my judogi once a week and hang dry, never has it developed a smell.

Problem arises when bacteria or mildew manage to get in the judogi (rolling with a dirty fella) then the moment sweat comes in the game they flourish, but nothing a good old sun dry and/or adding a spoon of ammonia in the cycle.

When i started training i only had one judogi and trained day and night so i didnt had time to wash and dry, and i was well off with a good washing machine, most didnt had washing machines that could handle good double weaves so they had to handwash which in a thick double weaves takes as much as 2 days to dry when handwashed.

And in 6 years of training hard sweating over a gallon (weighted in and after training), and over 100 degrees with 80-100 humidity, not a single case of ringworm or staph.

You are delusional. I guarantee your judo mates refer to you as "Mr. Stinky" behind your back.
 
BTW if you actually were a dermatologist you would realize a lot of diseases dont even need physical contact.

In my college the judo guys had gis that were not washed everyday (every week) we grappled and sweat over each other but we never had any disease, the TKD guys had like 2-4 herpes epidemics.

Again, there are other factors involved which have a bigger impact.
Oh man, I missed this earlier. Again, I must "LOL" @ you. Everyone knows not all diseases require contact between people. HOWEVER, herpes is not one of those! As an enveloped virus it is pretty darn sensitive to environmental factors, so if you're TKD friends were having a herpes outbreak among their team I'd speculate a lot of homosexual activity was going on o_0 lol

It's clear that you have no knowledge of infectious diseases. Please stop giving people bad advice and then telling us that we need to prove to everyone that your crazy theories are wrong. :rolleyes:
 
How is it different? I mean, in the big scheme of things the point of sewage removal is to reduce our exposure to potential pathogens. Where do these pathogens come from? Uhhhh, us, often.

But sewage does has a significant effect on health improvement.

Its not the same to remove vast amounts of pathogens than removing insignificant amounts, does sewage works? indeed there is evidence of that.

Does spraying alcohol on a toilet seat works?

Pretty unnecessary to understand basic disease communication. Modes of disease transmission are: human -> fomite -> human, fecal-oral, oral-oral, aerosol, etc, etc. If you're innoculating a fomite with potential pathogens on a daily basis, and they are accumulating, then you're increasing your risk.

So we should live in bubbles? there is a difference between potentially disease carrying concentration of pathogens is key.

Does people care about 1 or 2 CFU landed on meat when they eat? no, then why does meat industry has such high standards? Because the concentration upon contamination =/= concentration upon consumption.

A gi may have a few pathogens but their concentrations may not present any risk, just like money, public transport and shaking hands at the end of class carries pathogens. Do you know shake the hand of your teammates at the end of class?

If a gi is properly dried and aereated there is no time or risk of CFU to actually develop into full fledged colonies, SPECIALLY when sweat itself carries powerful antiseptics.

I.e. you don't have to do a scientific study to know that if you stick your dick in a blender it hurts. Just like you don't need to do a study specifically about BJJ and Gi's to know that cotton is a fomite, and washing reduces infectious disease load. There are studies that prove both of those things--in fact, cotton swabs are often used as a fomite in microbiology labs and our cotton lab coats are required to be washed after microbiology loabs! Herp derp!

Comparing the level of sanitation required in a lab or a hospital to the level of sanitation of real life is like comparing mall security to a military base. DERP DERP.

Yes, you do require an study before telling people they need to start living in spacesuits and spraying alcohol everywhere.

MYSOPHOBIA look it up.

In hospitals you have a lot of immune compromised people and high level of concentration of pathogens, plus a lot of personal mobility so sanitation is higher.

In the meat industry sanitation is extremely important when fresh meat is going to spend days before being consumed and pathogens have the potential to procreate, at a restaurant? not so much. That's why we can eat shellfish out of the sea, because concentration of pathogens in a healthy clam is low, have that clam dead for 2 days and its a bio weapon.

You also don't need to be Einstein to know that force=mass*acceleration.

Strawman, you really wont get far in medicine unless you treat it with respect.

And, since you're the person suggesting that something "isn't" dangerous, the burden of proof is on YOUR side! The risks of doing what you suggest are higher than doing what we suggest.

For someone pulling ad hominem you really suck

The null hypothesis is that there is no correlation between washing the gi everyday and a lower incidence of skin disease, the NULL hypothesis is the one that needs to be disproven, not the other way around. That's why nobody respects the FDA anymore.

What seems logical its not always so.

I can do the same thing

"defense soap kills bacteria, therefore defense soap is better than regular soap, its logical so its true, no need to prove".

No, my education means I understand scientific articles AND disease processes, transmission, etiology, etc. Your education means that you know how to read scientific articles and environmental science issues.

Again, evidence > ad hominem.

My education also trained me and more specially my wife into how to make clean processes in order to be able to pass standarization processes like HACCP. My education specially allowed me to see, that lab =/= real life.

As much as you believe in you, Hospitals are still controlled enviroments where special considerations are to be made, there needs to be a zero tolerance to pathogens. That its not the real world.

Burden of proof is on you, since you're advocating what are widely considered to be unsafe actions. I don't need to prove well-established knowledge o_0

Grappling is a widely considered unsafe actions and we dont know if the gi factor is independent of training, so yes, you would have a point (still needs to be proven) if we compared people who didnt grappled and used gis (aereated but not washed every session) compared to people who didnt grappled and used gis washed every session, that means a completely unrealistic scenario.

Really, its looking better to be a physician, you dont need to prove shit, you simply say, it has some logic so its true and to prove it would cost millions so simply hear me.

We who actually have to prove things with expensive time consuming and redundant sounding experiments actually have to prove stuff with field experiments.

Yep. That's true. Antibacterial soaps aren't doing you any good people. You're killing off normal flora and allowing for opportunistic infection. But, your Gi isn't your skin and washing with soap isn't the same as washing with antibiotic soap.

Im merely pointing out a flaw on an otherwise "logical" sounding theory.

So, keep your Gi clean so as not to expose yourself to potential pathogens, and don't kill the protective normal flora of your skin, allowing for opportunistic infections from bacteria such as strep and staph, or fungal tinea infections.

You literally have no idea what you're talking about. I'm sorry, bud, but it's the truth.

So asking for a piece of evidence when the empirical evidence (people from country where they dont wash judogis everyday are not more prone to infections) says otherwise?

If Americans are so clean, why is that in every single gym there is staph or ringworm?

I don't have time to read your article, but it's really nothing new that our body produces antibiotics. We've known that for ages. Just because a novel antibiotic was discovered doesn't mean that innate and acquired immunity to pathogens is a novel concept--it's not. And, if you're so awe-struck with our own natural defenses, I suggest that if you ever get a nasty case of MRSA or cellulitis you let them do their thing without any synthetic antibiotic therapy.

Cool, so you bring an Ad Hominem, claim that your Alternative hypothesis doesnt bears the burden of the proof as its fairly logical and then dismiss an article that shows that sweat (like saliva) has powerful antiseptic properties? Yes, you are such the great researcher. Good thing medicine is so hard to experiment well on, too much room for lazy researchers.

Nutrition is more complex than infection risk. In addition, people get stuff wrong... such is life. Environmental "scientists" like yourself convinced Australia that they had severe droughts coming b/c of climate change.

Actually that's meteorologists, im not a meteorologist.

What happens? Uhh, they just had some of the worst flooding in recent history. Am I to discredit all environmental science now?

You can discredit meteorology, but i have yet to hear about a meteorology to talk in absolutes as you have, they in fact love to bring a lot of mathematical modelling into the fray, talking to a climatologists is like talking to a mathematician that loves when mathematics are wrong, because the weather because of its inmensity its the only field where the normal distribution doesnt applies because everything is a part of a cycle of a cycle of a cycle.


Do it. But, you're advocating potentially dangerous behavior, not me. So, you provide the proof that wearing dirty clothes doesn't increase your risk of infection in an environment where close contact is common. And, for your sake, I'll pretend I've never heard about all of the many nosocomial infections we see in hospitals due to people having unsanitary practices, or fomite transmission.

I dont have to prove a null hypothesis, that's why its called null hypothesis, you are also claiming that a cloth that was sweated by a healthy man and properly aereated is "dirty" when does a cloth starts being dirty to begin with? if my training session is 1 hour and i finish and then train an hour the other day when i start is it dirty? so if i train 2 hours i have to take my "dirty" gi? you make no sense whatsoever.
 
Normal people get sick, too. Just less easily. So, if immune compromised patients are getting sick more often b/c of unsanitary pratices (fomite transmission, not washing hands, etc) then normal people are more "likely" to get sick as well. It's simple.

Actually its not, i can breath normal air for my whole life and not get sick, if 1 pathogen meets 1000 white cells he is done 100 out of 100. if the same pathogen meets only 2 he is not done, immuno system is the key to our normal lives. There are people who must live in bubbles which means that normal humans live lioves exposed to pathogens, i have a dog im exposes to pathogens, i have a cat so i get toxoplasmosis?

Or tell me the concentration of pathogenic germs in my gi after 1 hour of training drying my gi and then training another hour vs 2 straigth hours.

Seriously its not about this anymore, its about how sad is our currently system if people like you are actually studying for a PhD in med sciences. If i knew you didnt had to prove crap i would had done it too.

.S. I'm glad you've never acquired any infections. However, that's an n=1 experiment and we're worrying about large numbers of people. (As you should know). Just like some people drive their whole lives with no seatbelt on and are just fine, so might others be dirty while they roll BJJ with other dirty people and never acquire any sort of significant dermal infection.

Me, my whole team and other people who i have trained with, i have also contracted skin diseases from having hot baths and not drying properly. AKA as changing inside the bathroom because its cold outside.

Fallacy... *sigh* Whatever man. Don't wash your clothes if you don't want to, but at least be kind enough to inform your training partners.

Its a common practice in judo not to wash after every class, we guide ourselves by the smell, if it doesnt smells its fine, of course we are also not lazy and we keep our dogis clean and dry.
 
Yeah, why would I listen to hygiene recommendations from the National Institute of Health? What a bunch of quacks. Instead I should just listen to this dude named Rod1 because his wife has a Master's degree.

I guess the takeaway from this is that Rod1 believes washing machines are a conspiracy perpetrated by the general medical community. I think this belongs in an Eddie Bravo thread somewhere.

Cool, i guess that institute of health did a research that you can see instead of rehashing common hospital and lab practices right? And because we know that after grappling intensively with a sick individual you will be right as long as you wash your gi right? seriously.

I believe the medical community thinks so highly of themselves that they believe themselves over the scientific method.

You are delusional. I guarantee your judo mates refer to you as "Mr. Stinky" behind your back.

My gis never stink and when someone stinks we tell that to their faces we are not mysophobic puritans.

Oh man, I missed this earlier. Again, I must "LOL" @ you. Everyone knows not all diseases require contact between people. HOWEVER, herpes is not one of those! As an enveloped virus it is pretty darn sensitive to environmental factors, so if you're TKD friends were having a herpes outbreak among their team I'd speculate a lot of homosexual activity was going on o_0 lol

It's clear that you have no knowledge of infectious diseases. Please stop giving people bad advice and then telling us that we need to prove to everyone that your crazy theories are wrong.

Even TKD has some sort of contact betweem sharing gloves, sweat vaporization, drills etc etc.

Plus that's what we heard, that all the TKD team had herpes.
 
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