I know you all  --already knew this, but here it is in the NYTimes
today......
Paula in N. GA
*************************************************************************
*******************************
March 2, 2004
Bacteria Run Wild, Defying Antibiotics
By ABIGAIL ZUGER
 
 A new chapter in the continuing story of antibiotic resistance is being
written in doctors' offices across the country, as a group of common
bacteria rapidly becomes resistant to the antibiotics that have been used
to treat them for decades.

The bacteria are called Staphylococcus aureus, or staph for short. Staph
are the most common cause of skin infections like boils and can also
cause lung infections, bloodstream infections and abscesses in the body's
internal organs.

In hospitalized patients, infections caused by antibiotic-resistant staph
have been common for years. Among healthy people, though, antibiotic
resistance in staph has not been a big problem. Since the 1970's, doctors
have routinely, and successfully, treated staph infections in healthy
patients with penicillin-like drugs.

Not anymore. Office doctors who follow this practice now may find their
patients getting sicker instead of better.

Over the last year, Dr. John Gullett, an infectious disease specialist in
Abilene, Tex., has grown accustomed to getting calls for help from local
doctors who have used the usual antibiotics to no effect.

One doctor treated a high school football player "built like Charles
Atlas" with a standard oral antibiotic for a little boil in the groin.
Even though the teenager was the picture of health, the antibiotic did
not work.

The boil, caused by resistant staph, grew into an large abscess tracking
into the leg, and the patient got sicker and sicker. Only when Dr.
Gullett treated him with an intravenous antibiotic generally reserved for
desperately ill hospitalized patients did he turn the corner.

Had the patient's first doctor been aware that the infection was caused
by resistant staph and chosen a different oral antibiotic, the entire
episode might have been milder.

Resistant staph, Dr. Gullet said, are "more invasive and more pervasive"
than the strains most primary care doctors are used to treating.

Dr. Gonzalo Ballon-Landa, an infectious disease specialist at Mercy
Hospital in San Diego, said he was "very concerned about what we are
seeing."

Dr. Ballon-Landa has treated clusters of infections from resistant staph
in such disparate groups as prisoners, homeless people, student nurses
and football players.

"Most doctors are just not aware of this," said Dr. Bonnie Bock, an
infectious disease specialist in Newport Beach, Calif., who has treated
resistant staph infections in groups of secretaries, surfers and gay men.

Dr. Bock estimated that about two-thirds of the large staph abscesses she
saw in her office now were caused by the resistant bacteria.

Over all, staph infections are extremely common and often quite minor.
Even staph abscesses, if they are drained properly, may heal without
requiring any antibiotics at all. The new resistant staph can be treated
with several common antibiotics — just not the ones doctors are
accustomed to using. 

Still, the experts say that some infections caused by the new resistant
staph are unexpectedly aggressive, and delays in starting the right
antibiotics may be life-threatening.

"Staph infections are such a common problem that the emergence of
infections resistant to common antibiotics has important public health
implications," said Dr. Daniel B. Jernigan, an epidemiologist at the
federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But the infections are so common that they are not reportable to the
local or federal public health authorities. Because of this, detective
work to explain the appearance of the new resistant staph in this country
and track its progress is just beginning.

The resistant staph was first recognized in the United States among
children in Chicago in the mid-1990's. In 1999, the disease control
centers reported that four children in the Midwest had died of infections
with the new staph. Three of them had initially been treated with the
wrong antibiotics.

In the last several years, clusters of infections with the resistant
staph have been reported in jails and prisons in states around the
country, including California, Texas, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Clusters
of skin infections have also been reported among athletic team members
and military recruits.

Pediatricians in Miami and Los Angeles have found that 20 percent to 30
percent of the serious staph infections they see in nonhospitalized
children are caused by resistant strains. In Houston, rates in children
have approached 50 percent.

In the spring of 2002, the health department in Los Angeles learned of a
cluster of resistant staph infections in a group of healthy newborn
babies, followed in rapid succession by an outbreak at the county jail
that eventually involved more than 1,000 inmates, a cluster of infections
in a professional football team, and a cluster of infections among gay
men, said Dr. Elizabeth Bancroft, a medical epidemiologist with the Los
Angeles County Department of Health Services.

Although these infected groups had nothing at all to do with one another,
the bacteria that caused the infections in each group proved to be
virtually identical. Since 2002, the prevalence of the resistant staph in
Los Angeles has increased enormously, Dr. Bancroft said.

Like epidemiologists all over the country, Dr. Bancroft is puzzled by the
origin of the resistant staph and the way it can spread so quickly among
such diverse populations. 

One clue may be the bacteria's tendency to "ping-pong" among people, she
said. In a study of children with infections caused by the new resistant
staph, her group found that roughly 30 percent had family members with
similar infections around the same time, suggesting that the staph was
highly contagious and easily passed from one person's skin to another's.

The one thing that newborns, children, prisoners and athletes have in
common is the degree of close body contact they maintain with those
around them. They also share common objects with their peers, toys and
equipment, for example, or soap and towels. They may have difficulty
achieving optimal personal hygiene.

Close living, as in military barracks, also appears to be a risk factor
for infection with the resistant staph, as does having any kind of skin
abrasion or wound, even one as minor as chafing from underclothing or
athletic equipment, Dr. Jernigan said.

This winter, several fatal cases of pneumonia caused by the resistant
staph developed in children with influenza, presumably because the
influenza infection had damaged their lungs, allowing the staph to grow.

Experts are still grappling with the question of where the resistant
staph came from in the first place. It does not appear to have arisen in
any of the most common ways.

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria often develop when people take many
antibiotics, or frequent places like hospitals, where many antibiotics
are used. The antibiotics kill off the sensitive bacteria in people's
mouths, intestines and skin, and the bacteria that are naturally
resistant to the antibiotics thrive, and eventually predominate.

But this process, called "antibiotic pressure" cannot explain the
emergence of the new resistant staph, because among the general public
where these infections appear there is relatively little antibiotic use,
and many people with these infections have never taken antibiotics
before.

Did the bacteria simply escape from hospitals, where antibiotic-resistant
staph have been a problem for years? A great deal of evidence suggests
that they did not, Dr. Jernigan said.

The outpatient strains are biologically different from hospital strains,
and the collections of genes that cause antibiotic resistance in the new
strains are quite different from those that cause it in the older
strains.

Another ominous difference between the new resistant staph and the old
hospital strains is that the new staph strains appear far more likely to
manufacture a toxin that can destroy the white blood cells that normally
fight off infection, allowing the bacteria to eat through human tissue.

"The concern is that this or other toxins may be responsible for their
increased virulence," said Dr. Franklin D. Lowy, a staph researcher at
Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York, who
heads one of five groups around the country financed by the disease
control centers to study the new staph.

"The organism also appears able to replicate more rapidly than others,
which may also cause more serious disease," Dr. Lowy said.

As an example, he described a middle-aged woman with diabetes whom he
cared for recently. The woman developed pneumonia with the new staph, and
wound up spending months on a respirator in the intensive care unit, her
lungs shredded and useless from the infection.

Experts say that heightening doctors' awareness is crucial to tracking
and fighting the new staph.

Staph infections are so common that doctors often just prescribe an
antibiotic without bothering to drain collections of pus and take
cultures. Now they may need to take cultures routinely, and possibly
change the usual antibiotics they prescribe.

Patients, meanwhile, should know that mistaking a staph skin infection
for an insect bite, particularly a spider bite, is an extremely common
mistake, said Dr. Bancroft in Los Angeles, and may lead to delays in
treatment.

A skin infection that worsens even with treatment should alert patients
to the possibility of drug resistance. The new staph is resistant to such
common antibiotics as Keflex and Rocephin. It is treated with antibiotics
like Bactrim, Vibramycin and Cleocin.

Hospitals curb antibiotic-resistant organisms by taking a variety of
precautions, including preventing an infected person from skin contact
with others, disinfecting shared objects, and sometimes using antiseptics
like chlorhexidine to rid the skin and other body sites of resistant
staph.

It is possible, Dr. Jernigan said, that these measures may now be needed
to control resistant staph infections out of the hospital, too.



--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

To post, address your message to: [email protected]
Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html

Address Off-Topic messages to: [email protected]
OT Archive: http://escribe.com/health/silverofftopiclist/index.html

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>