Mrsa Detection & Treatment

MRSA (methicyllin-resistant staphylococcus aureus) is a serious infection that could lead to pneumonia or necrotizing fascitis. Detecting and treating it early is vital to eradicating the bacterium in the patient.
  1. Detecting MRSA

    • Doctors diagnose MRSA

      Medical personnel who suspect they have found MRSA in a patient look for specific signs. One sign is a reddish lesion that resembles a boil. The infection begins to “weep” pus or other fluid.

    MRSA Symptoms

    • Medical technician preparing to inject antibiotic into IV fluid

      Symptoms begin as small, red bumps on the skin or an infection of the skin/fat. Other manifestations of MRSA are boils, abscesses, carbuncles, impetigo or a sty--infected eyelid gland.

    MRSA Diagnosis

    • Medical personnel will take a sample of skin or pus to test for the MRSA bacterium (staphylococcus aureus). The sample is then grown in a Petri dish.

    MRSA Treatment

    • The patient who has MRSA for the first time has the wound/abscess incised and drained. This is only for mild infections. If it requires antibiotics, treatment should be guided by the “susceptibility profile” indicated during testing.

    Drug Resistance

    • Resistance to antibiotics develops quickly especially when patients don’t take the full course of medication. A new strain of MRSA is now resistant to Vancomycin.

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