Increased Risk Of Exposure To Contagious Staph Bacteria To Swimmers At Public Beaches
Main Category: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / VirusesAlso Included In: Public Health; MRSA / Drug Resistance; Water - Air Quality / Agriculture
Article Date: 16 Feb 2009 - 2:00 PDT
Research, funded by multiple agencies and conducted by the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science and Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, found that swimmers using public ocean beaches increase their risk for exposure to staph organisms, and may increase their risk for potential staph infections once they enter the water.
"Our study found that if you swim in subtropical marine waters, you have a significant chance -- approximately 37 percent - of being exposed to staph -- either yours or possibly that from someone else in the water near you," explained Dr. Lisa Plano, associate professor of pediatrics and microbiology and immunology at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine, who collaborated in the study, the first large epidemiologic survey of its kind.
"This exposure might lead to staph infection since people colonized with the bacteria carry it into the water with them. Those with open wounds or who are immune compromised are at greatest risk of infection." The good news: results show the potentially virulent variety of antibiotic resistant staph, commonly known as MRSA, makes up less than three per cent of staph from the beach waters sampled during the study.
While people shouldn't avoid beaches, the research team recommends taking precautions to reduce the risk of infection by showering thoroughly before entering the water and after getting out. More research is needed to understand how long staph (including MRSA) can live in coastal waters, and the uptake and infection rate associated with the beach exposures.
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The study was funded through the NSF/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Oceans and Human Health (OHH) Center at the University of Miami, the NSF/Small Grants for Exploratory Research, the Florida Department of Health and Environmental Protection, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmental Protection Agency. As one of the four OHH Centers in the World, the Oceans and Human Health Center at the University of Miami brings together medical and ocean researchers to investigate how humans affect oceans and how oceans affect humans in tropical and subtropical environments.
Source: Barbra Gonzalez
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science
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Bacteria
posted by Dan on 16 Feb 2009 at 7:34 amSometimes, Death Is Good….. For A Vicious Unicellular Microorganism
There are a variety of different types of foreign bacterial infections one can get from many different sources, yet some are more common than others. If they are not beneficial for your physiology, they all should die in order to restore your health.
Bacteria are a simple life form, yet are incredibly productive and efficient. As with other life forms, it exists to reproduce, and does so about every hour, and evolves and adapts to its environment as needed. To do this, it fully utilizes all available resources and energy to develop the protein that is essential for its survival, and bacteria have the ability to adapt as needed to assure this happens.
It needs exactly 7 genes to produce the essential ribosomes for this to occur. Any more or less genes than 7, the bacteria is not maximizing its efficiency to survive and reproduce. Amazing.
Strept infections are caused by what are called gram positive bacteria. Staph bacterial invasions are gram positive as well, yet it is the MRSA, Methicillin Resistant Staff Aureous bacterioan of this type often are very difficult to treat normally when a patient suffers from their damage from being invaded by these bacteria.
Another difficult situation is when a patient is infected by VRE, Vancomycin Resistant Enterococci, as well.
These MRSA and VRE pathogenic or disease causing bacteria are the ones that are the most clinically concerning for the health care provider. In most cases, such bacteria invade a resident of a medical institution, and have proved to result in very dangerous infections.
If so, they are called nosocomial infections, and such infections are not limited to resistant strains of bacteria. Greater than 5 percent of nosocomial infections are determined to be MRSA infections, others have determined. This results in about 100,000 serious hospital infections, as well as about 20,000 deaths from MRSA infections annually.
Group A strep infections can cause diseases such as strep throat and pneumonia. Since there are several types of bacteria, a diagnostic test called a culture and sensitivity is usually performed to assure the correct antibiotic is selected for treatment, as the bacteria are identified with this method.
Typically, fluid from the area suspected of being infected is obtained from the patient suspected to have an infection and smeared on what is called a petrie dish. And then these dishes are incubated for 2 to 3 days. Gram positive bacteria stain during this process a dark violet or blue. Gram negative bacteria would be pink in color, and are capable of harm as well to a human being.
When the culture is complete, technology offers recommendations on the appropriate class or brand of antibiotic for this bacteria present in another person- presuming the bacteria will not be resistant to the antibiotic recommended, as this happens on occasion.
Usually, classes of antibiotics that are used to treat gram positive strep infections that are not VRE or MRSA are cephalosporins, macrolides, or general penicillins. If the microbe that is causing the infection is resistant to the antibiotic from such classes that are administered to the infected patient, particularly with methicillin and vancomycin, which is the case with VRE and MRSA bacteria, then there are other more aggressive antibiotics that will be chosen for this patient.
Such brands and types of antibiotics for MRSA and VRE bacteria include Zyvox, which has both IV and oral dosage options. There are also other antibiotics, such as Cubicin. However these antibiotics for antibiotic resistant bacteria are given usually due to infections that have progressed to a more serious nature within a patient infected in such a way.
Progressive medical conditions include sepsis, or blood infection, osteomyelitis, or bone infection, or Pneumonia, which is a serious lung infection. A hospital stay is normally required with such patients, as the last antibiotics mentioned for MRSA and VRE bacterial infections are given by IV administration initially for several days, if not several weeks.
There are numerous classes and types of antibiotics available, yet bacterial resistance to most of these antibiotics constantly remains serious concern for the health care provider, and the infected patient, with MRSA at the top of the list of concerns for the health care providers. Medical institutions should possibly consider quarantine for those patients at their locations that have been determined to be infected with the MRSA bacteria
Dan Abshear
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/ar_mrsa_spotlight_2006.html
Swimming and MRSA
posted by Tina Carcione on 16 Sep 2010 at 3:57 pmI have found that MRSA bacteria is esp. prevelant in sporting equipment, and swim suits in one of them. Parents need to be aware of bleaching all uniforms that they children use to play sports. This article was fantastic in providing information.
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