• Cotton tipped
applicator sticks and tips are manufactured to uniform
length and shape
• Cotton tips are highly absorbent
• Smoothly polished white birch applicators so you won't get
a splinter
• 1000 per a box
• Non-sterile
• Medline Cotton
Tip Applicators
• Puritan Cotton Tip Applicators
• Dynarex Cotton Tip Applicators
• Dukal Cotton Tip Applicators
• Covidien Cotton Tip Applicators
• Curity Cotton Tip Applicators
• Solon Cotton Tip Applicators
• Henry Schein Cotton Tip Applicators
• Mckesson Cotton Tip Applicators
A Definitive History Of The Cotton
Tip Applicator.
Cotton swabs (British
English: cotton buds) are used in first aid, cosmetics
application, and a variety of other uses. They consist of
a small wad of cotton wrapped around the end of a small
rod, made of wood, rolled paper, or plastic. The most
common type of usage is to dip the cotton end in a
substance, then use the swab as an applicator for the
substance. Sometimes swabs are also used for removal of
substances such as wax from ear canals, though the
instructions accompanying the swabs generally contain a
warning that the swabs should not be inserted directly
into the ear, as doing so is actually dangerous. Using a
swab to remove wax can puncture the ear drum. It will
remove only a fraction of the wax, which is visible on the
removed swab, while pushing and packing the majority of
the wax further into the ear canal.
The inventor of the cotton swab is supposed to have been
one Leo Gerstenzang, in 1923 His product, which he named
"Baby Gays", went on to become the most widely-sold brand
name, "Q-tip".
The traditional cotton swab has a single tip on a wooden
handle, and these are still often used, especially in
medical settings. They are usually relatively long, about
six inches (15 cm or so). These often are packaged
sterile, one or two to a paper or plastic sleeve. The
advantage of the paper sleeve and the wooden handle is
that the package can be autoclaved to be sterilized
(plastic sleeves or handles would melt in the autoclave).
These medical-type swabs are often used to take
microbiological cultures. They are swabbed onto or into
the infected area, then wiped across the culture medium,
such as an agar plate, where any bacteria from the swab
will grow. They are also used to take DNA samples from,
most commonly, the inner cheek. As well, they can be used
to apply medicines to a targeted area, to selectively
remove substances from a targeted area, or to apply
cleaning substances like Betadine.
Cotton swabs produced for home use are usually shorter,
about three inches (7.6 cm) long, and usually
double-tipped. The handles were first made of wood, then
made of rolled paper, which is still most common (although
tubular plastic is becoming popular). They are often sold
in large quantities, possibly 300 or more to a container.
One recent innovation is to use a special type of
double-tipped cotton swab for over-the-counter drug
application. These swabs have hollow tubular plastic
handles, which are full of the medicine. Breaking one
marked end of the swab breaks an air seal, allowing the
medicine to saturate the cotton at the other end so that
it can be directly applied with the swab.
Swabs exist in a wide variety of colors: purple, fuchsia,
pink, green etc. However the cotton itself is white.
And now you know the rest of the story!