Livin' on the MDedge

Empty words, Captain Bacteria, and the perils of vampire facials


 

Shave that beard, Fido

The adage “a dog’s mouth is cleaner than a person’s” is getting an upgrade and this time it’s backed by science. A clinic in Zurich looked at the pathogenic microorganisms that reside in men’s beards and dogs’ fur and guess what – the beards were dirtier.

supersizer/E+

Despite beards’ manly cache among Millennials and hipsters, the results many have some reaching for the razor. The clinicians took a look at the bacterial load of colony-forming units of human-pathogenic microorganisms, and compared samples of beards and dog’s necks (since dogs don’t have beards, but how cute would that be?). They found high microbial counts in all beard samples, but only 23 of 30 dogs’ hair samples. Half of the human subjects carried so much bacteria that they were in danger of illness, the researchers noted.

Does this mean men are dirty? Or are dogs clean? The clinicians didn’t survey the men on their habits so it could be likely that they spend lots of time rolling around in the grass or drinking water from the toilet. More research is definitely needed here.

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