Pseudomonas loves water. Tap water, pool water, hot tub water, your contact lens solution. It’s famously difficult to kill and smells like fresh grapes or corn tortillas—which should be a delightful scent, but is instead a warning.
It doesn’t need many cells to take you down. Like, 500 bacteria—a microscopic speck—is enough. Salmonella needs thousands. Campylobacter is the lockpick of the gut: efficient, quiet, and devastating.
Staph aureus is the ultimate opportunist. It lives on about 30% of people’s skin without issue, pretending to be a normal resident. But the second you get a paper cut, a razor nick, or a tiny bug bite? It moves in. Suddenly, that harmless red dot turns into a angry, pus-filled boil that looks like it’s plotting revenge.
Pseudomonas loves water. Tap water, pool water, hot tub water, your contact lens solution. It’s famously difficult to kill and smells like fresh grapes or corn tortillas—which should be a delightful scent, but is instead a warning.
It doesn’t need many cells to take you down. Like, 500 bacteria—a microscopic speck—is enough. Salmonella needs thousands. Campylobacter is the lockpick of the gut: efficient, quiet, and devastating.
Staph aureus is the ultimate opportunist. It lives on about 30% of people’s skin without issue, pretending to be a normal resident. But the second you get a paper cut, a razor nick, or a tiny bug bite? It moves in. Suddenly, that harmless red dot turns into a angry, pus-filled boil that looks like it’s plotting revenge.