MRSA: From the Hospitals to the Streets
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It’s no secret that MRSA – the antibiotic-resistant flesh-eating superbug has been detected in our schools and communities, and not just in our hospitals. Children and others who scrape their arms or legs or who have accidents that require infection-control agents are often at risk for the cuts and scrapes becoming infected with drug-resistant strains of MRSA. The last thing anyone wants to see is an arm or leg having to be amputated or worse, a death occurring where it could have been prevented.
Luckily for most, there is a low-cost non-drug solution to clearing up and preventing MRSA called the New Silver Solution Gel and its liquid form New Silver Solution sold by distributors of Nutronix International products.
There are plenty of ionic and colloidal silver products on the market that work sporadically well. There is however, only one patented, FDA reviewed and approved, EPA approved silver product. It uses the patented Silver Sol Technology developed by American Biotech Labs in Alpine, Utah and is sold through its licensees like Nutronix International.
The New Silver Solution Gel and liquid form easily kill MRSA and a host of other ailments and diseases including Malaria. Since the products are not drugs or pharmaceutical compounds, deadly often drug-resistant forms of pathogenic bacteria and viruses have no way to mutate or adapt to the New Silver Solution killing mechanism in the blood-stream.
Whatsmore, these silver sol products are 100% safe to use – even in combination with other medications.
To try some, click the appropriate link below:
Learn More About New Silver Solution and Order
To Learn About Becoming a Reseller of New Silver Solution
Good Health to You,
Bruce
Related posts:
- Onslaught of MRSA Cases at Schools Puts Education Kit in Spotlight
- MRSA Epidemic Growing Worse
- FDA Approves New Prescription Wound Dressing Gel
- Powerful Evidence Confirms New Silver Sol Effectiveness
- 7 Reasons the New Silver Solution is ‘New’
- Tamiflu Hoax Exposed: Natural Remedies Still Best Prevention Method
- Silver Sol Technology Products in Focus

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December 9th, 2009 at 9:52 pm
What is the full form of MRSA ? Please tell
December 9th, 2009 at 10:30 pm
This is from Web-MD: Hope it answers your question.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a bacterium that causes infections in different parts of the body. It’s tougher to treat than most strains of staphylococcus aureus — or staph — because it’s resistant to some commonly used antibiotics.
The symptoms of MRSA depend on where you’re infected. Most often, it causes mild infections on the skin, causing pimples or boils. But it can also cause more serious skin infections or infect surgical wounds, the bloodstream, the lungs, or the urinary tract.
Understanding MRSA
MRSA is called a “super bug” because infections are resistant to many common antibiotics. Here’s what you need to know about drug-resistant staph:
Though most MRSA infections aren’t serious, some can be life-threatening. Many public health experts are alarmed by the spread of tough strains of MRSA. Because it’s hard to treat, MRSA is sometimes called a “super bug.”
What causes MRSA?
Garden-variety staph are common bacteria that can live on our bodies. Plenty of healthy people carry staph without being infected by it. In fact, 25-30% of us have staph bacteria in our noses.
But staph can be a problem if it manages to get into the body, often through a cut. Once there, it can cause an infection. Staph is one of the most common causes of skin infections in the U.S. Usually, these are minor and don’t need special treatment. Less often, staph can cause serious problems like infected wounds or pneumonia.
Staph can usually be treated with antibiotics. But over the decades, some strains of staph — like MRSA — have become resistant to antibiotics that once destroyed it. MRSA was first discovered in 1961. It’s now resistant to methicillin, amoxicillin, penicillin, oxacillin, and many other antibiotics.
While some antibiotics still work, MRSA is constantly adapting. Researchers developing new antibiotics are having a tough time keeping up.
Who gets MRSA?
MRSA is spread by contact. So you could get MRSA by touching another person who has it on the skin. Or you could get it by touching objects that have the bacteria on them. MRSA is carried, or “colonized,” by about 1% of the population, although most of them aren’t infected.
MRSA infections are most common among people who have weak immune systems and are living in hospitals, nursing homes, and other heath care centers. Infections can appear around surgical wounds or invasive devices, like catheters or implanted feeding tubes. Rates of infection in hospitals, especially intensive care units, are rising throughout the world. In U.S. hospitals, MRSA causes more than 60% of staph infections.
Community-Associated MRSA (CA-MRSA)
But MRSA is also showing up in healthy people who have not been living in the hospital. This type of MRSA is called community-associated MRSA, or CA-MRSA. The CDC reports that in 2007, 14% of people with MRSA infections had CA-MRSA.
Studies have shown that rates of CA-MRSA infection are growing fast. One study of children in south Texas found that cases of CA-MRSA had a 14-fold increase between 1999 and 2001.
CA-MRSA skin infections have been identified among certain populations that share close quarters or experience more skin-to-skin contact. Examples are team athletes, military recruits, and prisoners. However, more and more CA-MRSA infections are being seen in the general community as well, especially in certain geographic regions.
It’s also infecting much younger people. In a study of Minnesotans published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, the average age of people with MRSA in a hospital or healthcare facility was 68. But the average age of a person with CA-MRSA was only 23.