Home » Antibiotics, Big Agri, Big Pharma, Food Toxins, mrsa, Staph Infections

Undetected MRSA In Cow’s Milk

Submitted by on June 5, 2011 – 10:21 pm3 Comments

MRSA is cropping up everywhere including bedbugs, meat, and now cow’s milk. Human samples of the MRSA were traced back to animal sources.This new variant is able to elude tests that are the typical ways of detection.

Although it is possible to infect humans, scientists say the  risk is low. Of course this MRSA scare will serve as a catalyst to continue restrictive pasteurization requirements. While this might reassure those who continue to drink pasteurized milk, who wants to drink dead MRSA?

~Health Freedoms

MRSA Strain That Eludes Traditional Tests Found in Cow’s Milk, Study Finds

British scientists have discovered a new strain of the drug-resistant germ known as MRSA in cow’s milk and some evidence that the animals could be a source of the infection in humans.

University of Cambridge researchers were led to the discovery while studying an infection of the animals’ udders, according to an article published today in the U.K journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases.Tests showed that people in Scotland, England and Denmark carried the new variant of MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and that the bacteria can elude the usual means of detection.

Tests that search for the mecA gene, which enables the bacteria to resist treatment with some antibiotics, can miss the new, genetically different strain, researchers said. Relying solely on gene testing can lead doctors to prescribe medicines that are powerless against MRSA, the researchers said.

“It’s important that any of the MRSA testing that is based on detection of the mecA gene be upgraded to ensure that the tests detect the new gene found in the new MRSA,” said Mark Holmes, the lead researcher, in a statement.

While the new strain can cause disease in people, the risk of becoming infected is low, the scientists said. Further study is planned to determine how prevalent the new strain is and where it’s coming from, the researchers said.

Molecular Testing

Standard molecular screening for MRSA searches for the mecA gene. The new strain has a mecA gene that’s only 60 percent similar to the original version, leading to a false negative result when tested, the study found.

Testing should be updated to identify the genetic change, researchers said. The majority of testing in British hospitals is performed by seeing if the bacteria will grow in the presence of antibiotics, Holmes said.

“Even though this new strain isn’t picked up by the current molecular tests, they do still remain effective for the detection of over 99 percent of MRSAs,” said Angela Kearns, head of the U.K. Health Protection Agency’s Staphylococcus Reference Laboratory, in a statement.

The researchers also found evidence that cattle could be a key reservoir of the new strain of MRSA. The samples found in humans were either of a strain thought to be unique to animals or other types detected in cattle, the study said. In England, the researchers found a geographical association between human and animal isolates of MRSA. Pasteurization of milk will prevent infection, they said.

Staphylococcus aureas bacteria live on the skin and in nasal passages. Of the people with the bacteria present, about 1 percent have MRSA, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. MRSA causes infection when germs enters the body through a cut, a sore, a catheter or a breathing tube, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

MRSA Infections

MRSA infections can occur in hospitals or in otherwise healthy people who come into contact with the bacteria in settings such as locker rooms or daycare centers, the NIH said. Infections cause a red, painful, swollen area on the skin, and symptoms of severe cases include chest pain, chills, fatigue, fever and shortness of breath.

Serious MRSA infections acquired while in the hospital may be treated with medicines including Cubist Pharmaceuticals Inc. (CBST)’s Cubicin, Pfizer Inc.’s Zyvox and generic drugs such as doxycycline and tetracycline, according to NIH.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kristen Hallam in London at khallam@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Phil Serafino at pserafino@bloomberg.net

By Kristen Hallam

Source:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-02/new-mrsa-strain-that-eludes-usual-tests-found-in-cow-s-milk.html

 

Related posts:

  1. A Dose of ‘Good’ Bacteria Could Help Your Sinus Problems Some chronic sinus problems may be caused by a...
  2. Scientists: Overuse of Antibiotics in Animal Agriculture Endangers Humans Former FDA commissioner is among 150 scientists and 50...
  3. Scientists Sue Merck: Allege Fraud, Mislabeling, and False Certification of MMR Vaccine. Vaccinationists tell us we don’t understand science. Well maybe...
  4. Coconut Oil Could Combat Tooth Decay Digested coconut oil is able to attack the bacteria...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

3 Comments »

  • deenie says:

    I wonder if this MRSA problem is due to the use of routine use of antibiotics in stressed up animals in industrialized farms. I wouldn’t be surprised. I know in Germany they’re now having problems with E. coli in meat that is making people violently sick.

  • Aryd'ell Hotelling says:

    MRSA can also lodge in the spine, and commonly occurs during surgeries at hospitals, lately. They cannot filter this out of the air systems, and it has become a real problem.
    Ask my mother-in-law, who had a port put in for chemo treatments, during which she became infected with MRSA (and never got any chemo!), which lodged in the cervical spine. They had to go back in, take out the port, scrape all the MRSA they could from the spine, put in titaniumn mesh over the removed spine, and then 3 months of being on intravenous antibiotics.
    Result? She is quadraplegic, as the MRSA also attacked portion of the spinal cord.
    The real kicker? The doctors couldn’t even agree if she HAD cancer, much less which kind it was, to treat. If she had not had Duke insurance, she would have been left alone, and healthy today.
    Avoid unnecessary surgery! Get second and third opinions! Surgeons have expensive lifestyles, and need to cut to pay off their bills.

  • Brinna Nanda says:

    One of the more valuable properties of cannabis is its ability to destroy MRSA. I hope we will soon move quickly beyond our irrational treatment of this powerful herb in order to take full advantage of its brimming medicine “cabinet”.

    For those who are interested here is a fairly comprehensive article about the studies showing the MRSA-fighting capabilities of cannabis.
    http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/21366/

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.