I'm sure a lot of readers think that this silver stuff is just another dodgy woo-woo, but it is actually rather simple thing: in physical contact with many metals, including silver and aluminium, bacteria (and viruses with encapsulating shells) die, as their outer molecular structure breaks down. Because vertebrate cells have a different surface structure, they're not vulnerable to the same kind of breakdown. As aluminium has certain issues if used internally, medical dressings and creams
commonly use silver for exactly this purpose.
Antiperspirants use aluminium salts for two purposes: aluminium chlorohydrates form a colloid in sweat glands, which physically reduces sweating. Aluminium sulfate salts (alum) in turn inhibit bacteria; it is the bacteria subsisting on the sweat that generates the smell, as sweat itself is usually scentless. (There are certain compounds that do appear in sweat if they are ingested, though. That is, living human skin can smell different based on their diet.)
Nominal Animal, we have here a colloidal silver in spray form - can you find it there? It may be a bit more practical than electrolise it.
Yep, there are even local manufacturers (who work with Finnish Safety and Chemicals Agency control).
Colloidal silver is problematic in that it only stays on the surface; I'd like it to
adhere to the dressing, but be on the
surface too. I fear that if I just spray some to the dressing, it'll be transferred to my skin, and soon be absorbed/flushed/covered in the cut by the plasma and fibrins, and is no longer effective.
I haven't tested the Hansaplast Universal (which according to
ya.fi is a polyethylene strip with natural latex as the glue, with the wound pad made of cellulose viscose, polypropylene, polyethylene, aluminium, and silver), as I haven't yet gone to a store/pharmacy that has them. Due to the omicron stuff and it being the flu season, I'm kinda avoiding public transport.