| |
Methicillin
Resistant Staph Aureus (MRSA)
Staph aureus is a common bacteria that is normally found on
the skin of all persons. If this bacteria is able to get inside
the skin or body, it can create an infection of varying degrees
of severity. Methicillin Resistant Staph Aureus or MRSA is
staph that has developed immunity or resistance to certain
antibiotics including the antibiotic Methicillin and other
penicillins. About 1% of the population carries MRSA on their
skin and can pass it on to others who can then become MRSA
carriers. Again, MRSA only creates an infection if it gets
into the skin or body.
MRSA
used to be found only in people who had been hospitalized
for various reasons. Lately, it is being found in people who
have never been in the hospital and this is called Community
Associated MRSA or CA-MRSA. CA-MRSA skin infections have been
identified among certain populations that share close quarters
or experience more skin-to-skin contact such as athletes involved
in contact sports, military recruits, and prisoners.
The
symptoms of MRSA infection depend on where you've been infected.
MRSA most often appears as a skin infection, like a boil or
abscess. It also might infect a surgical wound. In either
case, the area will look swollen, red, painful, and pus filled.
Another feature to watch for is that the boil or abscess may
appear to worsen rather than get better with treatment.
The
good news is that MRSA is treatable. MRSA may be resistant
to some antibiotics, but there are still antibiotics available
that can be used successfully to treat this infection. If
you have a skin boil, your doctor may open the boil and drain
it as part of the treatment.
How
can you avoid getting MRSA? According to the CDC, here are
some of the best ways to prevent MRSA:
-
Wash your hands. Use soap and water or
an alcohol-base hand sanitizer. Also, wash thoroughly. Experts
suggest that you wash your hands for as long as it takes
you to recite the alphabet.
-
Cover cuts and scrapes with a clean bandage.
This will help the wound heal. It will also prevent you
from spreading bacteria to other people.
- Do
not touch other people's wounds or bandages.
- Do
not share personal items like towels or razors.
If you use any shared gym equipment, wipe it down before
and after you use it. Drying clothes, sheets, and towels
in a dryer - rather than letting them air dry - helps kill
bacteria.
For
more information about MRSA and CA-MRSA, please go to the following
links:
http://www.webmd.com/content/article/113/110688.htm
http://www.webmd.com/hw/infection/tp23380.asp
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/ar_mrsa_ca_public.html
|
|