WHICH IS BETTER: SOAP OR HAND SANITIZER?

 


Your hands, up close, are anything but smooth. With peaks and valleys, folds and rifts, there are plenty of hiding places for a virus to stick. If you then touch your face, the virus can infect you. 

But there are two extraordinary simple ways you can keep that from happening: soap and water, and hand sanitizer. So which is better?  The corona virus that causes COVID-19 is one of many viruses whise protective outer surface is made of a lipid bilayer.

These lipids are pin shaped molecules whose heads are attracted to water, and tails are repulsed by it. So in water rich environments, lipids naturally form a shell like this, with the heads outside and the tails inside. 

Their shared reaction to water makes the lipids stick loosely together this is called the hydrophobic effect. This outer structure helps the molecular machinery of the virus break through cellular membranes and hijack our cells.

But it has thousands upon thousands of weak points where the right molecules could pry it apart. And this is where soap comes in. A single drop of any brand of soap contains qudrillions of molecules called amphiphiles, which resemble biological lipids.

Their tails, which are similarly repulsed by water, compete for space with the lipids that make up the virus's shell. But they are just different enough to break up the regularity of the virus's membrane, making the whole thing come crashing down.

Those amphiphiles then form bubbles of their own around particles including the virus's RNA proteins. Apply water and you will wash that whole bubble away. Hand sanitizers work less like a crowbar, and more like an earthquake.

When you surround a coronavirus with water, the hydrophobic effect gives the bonds within the membrane their strength. That same effect also holds the big proteins that form coronavirus's spikes in place and in the shape that enables them to infect your cells.

If you dry the virus out in air, it keeps its stability. But now surrounded it with a high concentration of an alcohol, like the ethanol or isopropanol found in most hand sanitizers. This makes the hydrophobic effect disappear, and gives the molecules  room to move around.

The overall effect is like removing all of the nails and mortal from a house and then hitting it with an earthquake. The cell's membrane collapses and those spike proteins crumble. In either method the actual process of destroying the virus happens in just a second or two.

But doctors recommended at least 20 seconds of hand washing because of the intricate landscape that is your hand. Soap and sanitizer need to get everywhere, including your palms, fingertips, the outsides of your hands, and between your fingers, to protect you properly.

And when it comes to a coronavirus outbreak, doctors recommend washing your hands with soap and water whenever possible. Even though both approaches are similarly effective at killing the virus, soap and water has two benefits: 

First it washes away any dirt which could otherwise hide virus particles. But more importantly, its simple easier to fully cover your hands with soap and water for 20 seconds. Of course hand sanitizer is more convenient to use on the go.

In the abscence of a sink, use the sanitizer as throughly as possible and rub your hands together until they are dry. Unfortunately there are billions of people who dont have access to clean drinking water, which is a huge problem at any time but specially during an outbreak.

Researches an aid groups are working to provide solutions for these communities. One example is a device that uses salt, water, and a car battery to make chlorinate water that kills harmful pathogens and is safe for hand washing.

So wherever possible, soap and water are recommended for a coronavirus, but does that mean its best for every viral outbreak? Not necessarily. Many common colds are caused by rhinoviruses that have a geometric protein structure called a capsid instead of a lipid membrane.

That capsid doesn't have nearly as many weak points where soap amphiphiles can pry it apart, so it takes longer for soap to be effective. However some of its surface proteins are still vulnerable to the destabilizing effect of hand sanitizer.

In this and similar cases, hand sanitizer may be more effective, specially if you then wash your hands to remove residual particles. The best way to know which to use for any given outbreak is to do whats best for all things illness related: follow the advice of accredited medical professionals.

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