Table of Contents
What organ system is affected by MRSA?
The skin is the part of the body most affected by the condition, as the bacteria can cause boils, blisters, hair root infection, and peeling skin. If not monitored or treated properly, MRSA can spread to affect the blood, bones, and major organs of the body like the heart and lungs.
Can MRSA affect internal organs?
In rare instances, MRSA can enter the bloodstream, spread to internal organs and cause death. Signs of internal organ infection include fever, chills, low blood pressure, joint pains, severe headaches, shortness of breath and a rash over most of the body.
Can MRSA cause organ failure?
The MRSA bacteria had seeped into his blood, bones and organs, causing multi-system organ failure.
How does MRSA damage the body?
Most often, it causes mild infections on the skin, like sores, boils, or abscesses. But it can also cause more serious skin infections or infect surgical wounds, the bloodstream, the lungs, or the urinary tract. Though most MRSA infections aren’t serious, some can be life-threatening.
Can MRSA affect your kidneys?
MRSA can cause many other symptoms, because once it gets into your bloodstream, MRSA can settle anywhere. It can cause abscess in your spleen, kidney, and spine.
Can MRSA cause stomach problems?
As witnessed in our patient, MRSA can cause spontaneous, invasive, gastrointestinal disease despite the absence of any risk factors.
Can MRSA make your body ache?
When MRSA infection spreads beyond these areas to involve the bloodstream, systemic (body-wide) symptoms occur. These can include fever, chills, low blood pressure, joint pains, severe headaches, shortness of breath, and widespread rash.
What is MRSA and why is it so dangerous?
These bacteria are called MRSA: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus . MRSA is dangerous because it cannot be treated with many standard antibiotics. MRSA behaves much like other staph bacteria. It most often lives in the nose or on the skin without causing disease.
What are the long term effects of MRSA?
Some long-term effects of meningitis are brain damage, hearing loss and blindness. Inflammation of the heart is a concern with MRSA. This can lead to infection of the heart valves and long-term heart problems. MRSA can cause toxic shock syndrome, leading to long-term damage of the kidneys, heart and liver.
How long does it take for MRSA to go away?
Normally it takes around 10 days to get complete recovery from MRSA infection. However, the time varies from person to person and depends upon a variety of factors.
Can you ever get rid of MRSA completely?
The good news is yes, and although MRSA is difficult to treat, and is resistant to many antibiotics, decolonisation and a few antibiotics can cure MRSA infections. A standard treatment can include the use of a chlorhexidine oral rinse, mupirocin nasal ointment, and a full-body wash using chlorhexidine soap for a period of 5 days.