Guest guest Posted March 29, 2006 Report Share Posted March 29, 2006 In our sick house 10 years ago, a few months after evacuating we found that we could be back in the house without ill effect. Thinking we were going to clean and reoccupy, we had a pretty good quality central vacuum system installed, carefully vented outdoors. I started vacuuming a modest size rug (sitting on hard surface floor), and within minutes we were all having systemic reactions and had to leave the house again...and what the vacuum had stirred up took a week to settle back out. Disagree on the childhood asthma: the carpet/floor is simply a reservoir of particulates. It is the original source of those particulates that is the problem. Vacuuming when the house is well ventilated (windows open, breeze blowing through) net reduces the amount of " stuff " in the building interior. Yes, sensitized people should be somewhere else when this is done, clothes put away, and beds covered. And based on our sick house I now believe that water soluble particulates -- those which will get back into the air simply by dissolving in humidity that gets too close -- is much more likely the problem than insoluble substance. Naively I expect it is easier for a low molecular weight substance already dissolved in a water droplet that hits the lung surface to make it to the bloodstream, than for an insoluble solid which deposits on the lung surface. Steve Chalmers stevec@... ----------------------------------------- Message: 12 Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2006 15:08:57 -0800 Subject: Re: DYSON vacuum Marine has it correct...All vacuums discharge a whole lot of micron-size particulates, and indoor vacuums contribute significantly to negative IAQ. If you don¹t think so, use a particle counter and see for yourself. The operation of almost any vacuum results in several orders of magnitude of measurable particulates indoors over ambient conditions. I believe vacuums are the root cause of so much childhood asthma. In a parent¹s quest to provide a clean home for their children, frequent vacuuming is not good. Frequent vacuuming is, more often than not, doing much more harm to the young and developing lung systems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.