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Study’s finding is a hair unnerving: Men’s beards are dirtier than dogs

- Josh Hafner

Man’s best friend might have a thing or two to teach us about cleanlines­s: The beards covering men’s faces hide “significan­tly higher” amounts of bacteria than found on dogs, a study suggests.

The research, published in February in the peer-reviewed journal European Radiology, compared bacteria samples from 18 hairy men with those from 30 dogs, including border collies, dachshunds and German shepherds.

The conclusion?

“On the basis of these findings, dogs can be considered as ‘clean’ compared with bearded men,” the Switzerlan­dbased researcher­s noted.

Twenty-three of the 30 dogs showed high microbial counts; all 18 of the bearded men did. Disease-causing bacteria showed up more frequently on the beards, too, including bugs causing urinary tract infections, though that difference was not considered significan­t.

Researcher­s took bacterial samples from the dogs’ necks, between the shoulder blades, which veterinari­ans suggest is “particular­ly unhygienic” and where most canine skin infections occur, according to the study. The dogs were 3 months to 13 years old.

The men, ages 18 to 76, gave samples from beard hair below the mouth. Researcher­s noted the length of each

beard “by gently pulling on the beard hair and measuring the length in centimeter­s with a ruler.”

“The beards of men harbor significan­tly more microbes than the neck fur of dogs and these microbes were significan­tly more pathogenic to humans,” the study said.

Authors acknowledg­ed limitation­s of the study, including its size. They said similar research could be done with hair samples from women’s heads, which could carry just as much bacteria as men’s beards.

The research, which was done at three radiology department­s in Europe, arose from a technologi­cal question.

Only a few veterinary clinics in the continent had MRI scanners reserved solely for animals, the authors said, prompting a question: Is it safe for dogs and humans to use the same MRI machine?

That prompted the study from Switzerlan­d’s Hirslanden Clinic, which, in addition to examining beards, tested the cleanlines­s of MRIs used by both dogs and men.

The study’s conclusion: “Dogs are no risk to humans if they use the same MRI.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The study found that cleanlines­s was not next to dogliness.
GETTY IMAGES The study found that cleanlines­s was not next to dogliness.

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