I've been having my leg bags for 13 years, and have found that bleach water works the best. Just use half a cup of bleach per gallon of water. Then, when you clean the bag, first use hot water, then bleach water (be sure to pour a little over the inside of the tube connector), then hot water. It works great!
Check out my website --Www.SurvivingParalysis.com Nick ----- Original Message ----- From: Danny Hearn To: [email protected] ; LTeasley Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2009 6:24 PM Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] leg bag cleaners seabreeze is very expensive for a small bottle, mostly used as a topical skin cleanser for face and so on. I heard that white vinegar mixed with water is one of the best cleaners and bacteria killers for counter tops and leg bags and such. dan h. --- On Sat, 6/27/09, LTeasley <[email protected]> wrote: From: LTeasley <[email protected]> Subject: [QUAD-L] leg bag cleaners To: [email protected] Date: Saturday, June 27, 2009, 6:49 PM hello, have any of you ever heard of a product called "seabreeze" for the purpose of cleaning out the leg/overnight bags? The ingredients listed on the bottle is phosphoric acid with emulsifiers. Any ideas or opinions on whether or not this works to get all the big bad bugs (bacteria) out? It's a really pretty blue color, but pretty colors aren't everything. The only thing I have managed to pull up online about phosphoric acid is that it works well for water deposits on tile. Lucinda C-4,5 complete July 31, '05 Mpls., MN

