Pillows - a hot bed of fungal spores (October 14, 2005)
Researchers at The University of Manchester funded by the Fungal Research Trust have discovered millions of fungal spores right under our noses - in our pillows.
Aspergillus fumigatus, the species most commonly found in the pillows, is most likely to cause disease; and the resulting condition Aspergillosis has become the leading infectious cause of death in leukaemia and bone marrow transplant patients. Fungi also exacerbate asthma in adults.
The researchers dissected both feather and synthetic samples and identified several thousand spores of fungus per gram of used pillow - more than a million spores per pillow.
Fungal contamination of bedding was first studied in 1936, but there have been no reports in the last seventy years. For this new study, which was published online today in the scientific journal Allergy, the team studied samples from ten pillows with between 1.5 and 20 years of regular use.
Each pillow was found to contain a substantial fungal load, with four to 16 different species being identified per sample and even higher numbers found in synthetic pillows. The microscopic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus was particularly evident in synthetic pillows, and fungi as diverse as bread and vine moulds and those usually found on damp walls and in showers were also found.
Professor Ashley Woodcock who led the research said: "We know that pillows are inhabited by the house dust mite which eats fungi, and one theory is that the fungi are in turn using the house dust mites' faeces as a major source of nitrogen and nutrition (along with human skin scales). There could therefore be a 'miniature ecosystem' at work inside our pillows."
Aspergillus is a very common fungus, carried in the air as well as being found in cellars, household plant pots, compost, computers and ground pepper and spices.
Invasive Aspergillosis occurs mainly in the lungs and sinuses, although it can spread to other organs such as the brain, and is becoming increasingly common across other patient groups. It is very difficult to treat, and as many as 1 in 25 patients who die in modern European teaching hospitals have the disease.
Immuno-compromised patients such as transplantation, AIDS and steroid treatment patients are also frequently affected with life-threatening Aspergillus pneumonia and sinusitis. Fortunately, hospital pillows have plastic covers and so are unlikely to cause problems, but patients being discharged home - where pillows may be old and fungus-infected - could be at risk of infection.
Aspergillus can also worsen asthma, particularly in adults who have had asthma for many years, and cause allergic sinusitis in patients with allergic tendencies. Constant exposure to fungus in bed could be problematic. It can also get into the lung cavities created by tuberculosis which affects a third of the world's population, causing general ill-health and bleeding in the lung, as well as causing a range of plant and animal diseases.
Dr Geoffrey Scott, Chairman of the Fungal Research Trust which funded the study, said: "These new findings are potentially of major significance to people with allergic diseases of the lungs and damaged immune systems - especially those being sent home from hospital."
Professor Ashley Woodcock added: "Since patients spend a third of their life sleeping and breathing close to a potentially large and varied source of fungi, these findings certainly have important implications for patients with respiratory disease - especially asthma and sinusitis."
Pillows have WHAT in them?
http://www.manchester.ac.uk/aboutus/news/pressreleases/pillows/
Pillows - a hot bed of fungal spores (October 14, 2005)
Researchers at The University of Manchester funded by the Fungal Research Trust have discovered millions of fungal spores right under our noses - in our pillows.
Aspergillus fumigatus, the species most commonly found in the pillows, is most likely to cause disease; and the resulting condition Aspergillosis has become the leading infectious cause of death in leukaemia and bone marrow transplant patients. Fungi also exacerbate asthma in adults.
The researchers dissected both feather and synthetic samples and identified several thousand spores of fungus per gram of used pillow - more than a million spores per pillow.
Fungal contamination of bedding was first studied in 1936, but there have been no reports in the last seventy years. For this new study, which was published online today in the scientific journal Allergy, the team studied samples from ten pillows with between 1.5 and 20 years of regular use.
Each pillow was found to contain a substantial fungal load, with four to 16 different species being identified per sample and even higher numbers found in synthetic pillows. The microscopic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus was particularly evident in synthetic pillows, and fungi as diverse as bread and vine moulds and those usually found on damp walls and in showers were also found.
Professor Ashley Woodcock who led the research said: "We know that pillows are inhabited by the house dust mite which eats fungi, and one theory is that the fungi are in turn using the house dust mites' faeces as a major source of nitrogen and nutrition (along with human skin scales). There could therefore be a 'miniature ecosystem' at work inside our pillows."
Aspergillus is a very common fungus, carried in the air as well as being found in cellars, household plant pots, compost, computers and ground pepper and spices.
Invasive Aspergillosis occurs mainly in the lungs and sinuses, although it can spread to other organs such as the brain, and is becoming increasingly common across other patient groups. It is very difficult to treat, and as many as 1 in 25 patients who die in modern European teaching hospitals have the disease.
Immuno-compromised patients such as transplantation, AIDS and steroid treatment patients are also frequently affected with life-threatening Aspergillus pneumonia and sinusitis. Fortunately, hospital pillows have plastic covers and so are unlikely to cause problems, but patients being discharged home - where pillows may be old and fungus-infected - could be at risk of infection.
Aspergillus can also worsen asthma, particularly in adults who have had asthma for many years, and cause allergic sinusitis in patients with allergic tendencies. Constant exposure to fungus in bed could be problematic. It can also get into the lung cavities created by tuberculosis which affects a third of the world's population, causing general ill-health and bleeding in the lung, as well as causing a range of plant and animal diseases.
Dr Geoffrey Scott, Chairman of the Fungal Research Trust which funded the study, said: "These new findings are potentially of major significance to people with allergic diseases of the lungs and damaged immune systems - especially those being sent home from hospital."
Professor Ashley Woodcock added: "Since patients spend a third of their life sleeping and breathing close to a potentially large and varied source of fungi, these findings certainly have important implications for patients with respiratory disease - especially asthma and sinusitis."
Mileron
20 years ago
http://www.manchester.ac.uk/aboutus/news/pressreleases/pillows/
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Veb will look young forever because he has oily skin. He doesn't break out but he doesn't look his age, either. This goes for my mother as well. She's 61 but looks 41. In any case, I can always tell which pillow his his.
It has the oil/sweat stain on it =x
It has the oil/sweat stain on it =x
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Veb will look young forever because he has oily skin. He doesn't break out but he doesn't look his age, either. This goes for my mother as well. She's 61 but looks 41. In any case, I can always tell which pillow his his.
It has the oil/sweat stain on it =x
It has the oil/sweat stain on it =x
Just Erin
20 years ago
I have oily skin and hair. I feel your pain, Roz. My pillows are stained as well. I wash my hair and face before I go to bed EVERY NIGHT, but they are oily again by morning. When they start to look gross, I throw them away. My pillow cases never match my sheets because I'm always buying new pillow cases. I probably have twice as many sets of pillow cases as I do sets of sheets.
Germs on our pillows, you say? THERE'S A SHOCKER! Jeez, don't these people have better things to study? Go find a cure to cancer, please (and don't try to blame our bed linens when you can't find one right away).
Of course there are germs on our pillows and sheets. We sleep and drool on them. We fuck on them. We let our cats and dogs lay on them. We let our kids build forts on the living room floor with them. We drag them with us on car trips and on airplanes. We toss dirty clothes and damp towells on them (HEY, bet there are germs on our towells too!).
There are germs everywhere. Was yourself, wash your clothes, wash your sheets ... the germs may diminish but they are still there. It's a fact of life. Studies like this make people hypochondriacs. Give me a break.
Germs on our pillows, you say? THERE'S A SHOCKER! Jeez, don't these people have better things to study? Go find a cure to cancer, please (and don't try to blame our bed linens when you can't find one right away).
Of course there are germs on our pillows and sheets. We sleep and drool on them. We fuck on them. We let our cats and dogs lay on them. We let our kids build forts on the living room floor with them. We drag them with us on car trips and on airplanes. We toss dirty clothes and damp towells on them (HEY, bet there are germs on our towells too!).
There are germs everywhere. Was yourself, wash your clothes, wash your sheets ... the germs may diminish but they are still there. It's a fact of life. Studies like this make people hypochondriacs. Give me a break.
Just Erin
20 years ago
I have oily skin and hair. I feel your pain, Roz. My pillows are stained as well. I wash my hair and face before I go to bed EVERY NIGHT, but they are oily again by morning. When they start to look gross, I throw them away. My pillow cases never match my sheets because I'm always buying new pillow cases. I probably have twice as many sets of pillow cases as I do sets of sheets.
Germs on our pillows, you say? THERE'S A SHOCKER! Jeez, don't these people have better things to study? Go find a cure to cancer, please (and don't try to blame our bed linens when you can't find one right away).
Of course there are germs on our pillows and sheets. We sleep and drool on them. We fuck on them. We let our cats and dogs lay on them. We let our kids build forts on the living room floor with them. We drag them with us on car trips and on airplanes. We toss dirty clothes and damp towells on them (HEY, bet there are germs on our towells too!).
There are germs everywhere. Was yourself, wash your clothes, wash your sheets ... the germs may diminish but they are still there. It's a fact of life. Studies like this make people hypochondriacs. Give me a break.
Germs on our pillows, you say? THERE'S A SHOCKER! Jeez, don't these people have better things to study? Go find a cure to cancer, please (and don't try to blame our bed linens when you can't find one right away).
Of course there are germs on our pillows and sheets. We sleep and drool on them. We fuck on them. We let our cats and dogs lay on them. We let our kids build forts on the living room floor with them. We drag them with us on car trips and on airplanes. We toss dirty clothes and damp towells on them (HEY, bet there are germs on our towells too!).
There are germs everywhere. Was yourself, wash your clothes, wash your sheets ... the germs may diminish but they are still there. It's a fact of life. Studies like this make people hypochondriacs. Give me a break.
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Erin has stinky pillowcases! /snort
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Erin has stinky pillowcases! /snort
Vex
20 years ago
who the fuck uses the same pillow for 20 years?
Vex
20 years ago
who the fuck uses the same pillow for 20 years?
Mileron
20 years ago
*slowly raises his hand, then puts it down, then starts to put it back up*
Going on sixteen...
Vex
who the fuck uses the same pillow for 20 years?
*slowly raises his hand, then puts it down, then starts to put it back up*
Going on sixteen...
Mileron
20 years ago
*slowly raises his hand, then puts it down, then starts to put it back up*
Going on sixteen...
Vex
who the fuck uses the same pillow for 20 years?
*slowly raises his hand, then puts it down, then starts to put it back up*
Going on sixteen...
Sarah
20 years ago
I've said it once and I'll say it again Mileron...
That is just nasty.
The pillow I have now is the longest I've ever had a pillow and it's just barely two years old. *shudders at Mileron's 16 year old pillow*
That is just nasty.
The pillow I have now is the longest I've ever had a pillow and it's just barely two years old. *shudders at Mileron's 16 year old pillow*
Sarah
20 years ago
I've said it once and I'll say it again Mileron...
That is just nasty.
The pillow I have now is the longest I've ever had a pillow and it's just barely two years old. *shudders at Mileron's 16 year old pillow*
That is just nasty.
The pillow I have now is the longest I've ever had a pillow and it's just barely two years old. *shudders at Mileron's 16 year old pillow*
Vex
20 years ago
*gags*
*shivers*
*never returns to this thread*
*shivers*
*never returns to this thread*
Vex
20 years ago
*gags*
*shivers*
*never returns to this thread*
*shivers*
*never returns to this thread*
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Oh man, Mileron. That's NASTY. Go to walmart and buy a new pillow. /shudder
ROzbeans
20 years ago
Oh man, Mileron. That's NASTY. Go to walmart and buy a new pillow. /shudder
Adiene
20 years ago
Hince the saying "Don't let the bed bugs bite" ... they not only exsist in pillows but in bed as well feedin off dead skin cells etc etc ... and 16 year old pillows? ..... must be like sleeping on paper by now?!? lol
I thought this had been established years and years and years ago.. why the hell do they keep studing this shit and yield the same fucking results all the time? I guess this is why I am not so science friendly /shrug. I'm with Erin
... go study and find cures that are actually helpful in the world like cures for cancer, aids etc .. >(
I thought this had been established years and years and years ago.. why the hell do they keep studing this shit and yield the same fucking results all the time? I guess this is why I am not so science friendly /shrug. I'm with Erin
... go study and find cures that are actually helpful in the world like cures for cancer, aids etc .. >(
Adiene
20 years ago
Hince the saying "Don't let the bed bugs bite" ... they not only exsist in pillows but in bed as well feedin off dead skin cells etc etc ... and 16 year old pillows? ..... must be like sleeping on paper by now?!? lol
I thought this had been established years and years and years ago.. why the hell do they keep studing this shit and yield the same fucking results all the time? I guess this is why I am not so science friendly /shrug. I'm with Erin
... go study and find cures that are actually helpful in the world like cures for cancer, aids etc .. >(
I thought this had been established years and years and years ago.. why the hell do they keep studing this shit and yield the same fucking results all the time? I guess this is why I am not so science friendly /shrug. I'm with Erin
... go study and find cures that are actually helpful in the world like cures for cancer, aids etc .. >(