Dealing with Dust Buford GA

House dust is a complex mixture composed of pollens and spores; plant hairs and flower parts that are tracked indoors; fragments and feces from insects such as moths, cockroaches, ants, silverfish, spiders, and mites; fibers of material made from cellulose such as cotton, wool, linen, jute, wood kapok; man-made fibers such as fiberglass, nylon, plastic, rubber; animal and human hair and skin cells; cigarette smoke; fireplace soot; diesel exhaust carbon; lead; insecticides; aerosols from personal care products ; and cat and dog antigen. It also may include food particles, such as allergenic wheat products, and tracked-in dirt that becomes worn to a powder.

TriBac Development LLC
10722 Abbotts Bridge Rd
Duluth, GA
Full Circle Restoration & Construction
4325 River Green Parkway, Suite 150
Duluth, GA
Tracy Tesmer Design/Build/Remodeling
1730 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Gainesville, GA
Raymac Remodeling
142 West Ridge Way
Roswell, GA
Olive Tree Gardenscapes
(770)614-6785
2780 White Blossom Lane Northwest
Buford, GA
DuraCraft of Georgia Siding & Window Co
130 Stanley Court
Lawrenceville, GA
PD Squared
6140-B Northbelt Parkway
Norcross, GA
Weidmann & Associates
1875 Old Alabama, Suite 1310
Roswell, GA
Classic Lawn Landscape Design Inc
(770)978-6901
5071 Blackberry Ln
Buford, GA
Affordable Enterprises Inc
(770)831-6991
5221 Palmero Court
Buford, GA
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Dealing with Dust

Dealing with Dust

written by Mark Sneller, PhD |

Dealing With DustHouse Dust: Just what is this stuff that causes perennial allergic rhinitis, bronchial asthma and respiratory allergy?

House dust is a complex mixture composed of pollens and spores; plant hairs and flower parts that are tracked indoors; fragments and feces from insects such as moths, cockroaches, ants, silverfish, spiders, and mites; fibers of material made from cellulose such as cotton, wool, linen, jute, wood kapok; man-made fibers such as fiberglass, nylon, plastic, rubber; animal and human hair and skin cells; cigarette smoke; fireplace soot; diesel exhaust carbon; lead; insecticides; aerosols from personal care products ; and cat and dog antigen. It also may include food particles, such as allergenic wheat products, and tracked-in dirt that becomes worn to a powder.

Whew. Who would have thought all these substances could reside in such a tiny particle?

The chief problem with house dust comes from the ninety percent that settles on surfaces, not the ten percent that floats in the air. One study showed that the average six-room home can accumulate up to forty pounds of dust per year. The worst areas of the home for house dust are the carpet (especially deep pile), upholstered furniture, mattresses, box springs, blankets, bedspreads, comforters, quilts, drapes, and stuffed animals. Usually older upholstered furniture causes more allergies, because it has deeper layers of dust and a larger reservoir of dust mites .

Here are few ways to reduce household dust .

If you are in the market for furniture, look for solid unwoven or tight-weave fabrics. They may be cotton or synthetic. Either will retain very little dust.

If you don’t want to replace older furniture, consider shopping for a sofa or chair cover made of a tight-weave fabric.

Cover your bed with a tight-weave blanket to catch the dust. Fold it back at night.

Regularly run bedspreads through your dryer’s “air” cycle to removed dust.

Household dust settles near the walls because of its tendency to swirl outward as we walk, so concentrate your vacuuming or dusting at the floor’s edges.

Since tracking is the primary entry of dust into the home, leaving your shoes at the door greatly reduces the presence of dust that contains allergens.

Purchase vertical, rather than horizontal, blinds.

Decorate with curtains, drapes and lamp shades that are smooth and solid instead of rough and porous.

Click here to read the rest of the article from Boomer-Living.com

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