Vet School 101 OMG! MRSA! …and antibiotics and pets

November 26th, 2007  

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a few random comments:
* One thing that drives me crazy on pet message boards are people who post messages like "I think my cat/dog has an ear/eye infection, and I have some antibiotics left. Can I put some on my pet? I don't want to go to a vet"
Or worse, those who recommend to other people to put antibiotic on any little cat scratch they happen to get.
Arrggh!
* As someone who is allergic to Penicillin (a few years back, a single dose of AMOXYCILLIN given to me for a tonsil infection sent me in an ambulance to the ER), I sure hope I won't catch one of those bugs.
* My mother has chronic bronchiectasis, and goes through alternating rounds of antibiotics to control the infection in her lungs. Our of us dread the day they will no longer have effect, and we are well aware that we are actually selecting for that day. Too bad the other option for is to stop breathing...
(when they stop working it will probably be time for her to go on the waiting list for a heart and lung transplant. Not a prospect we are looking forward to).

Xslf November 26th, 2007 01:01:00 PM

Not sure if you've heard about it, but there is a group dedicated to helping educate pet owners and veterinarians about MRSA in pets. It's called the Bella Moss Foundation (named after the creator's dog, who died from a MRSA infection because no one diagnosed or treated it properly):

http://www.thebellamossfoundation.com/

Janine November 26th, 2007 01:16:00 PM

Janine: One of the websites I linked to in the post had a link to the Bella Foundation. Before this post I had no idea it existed. Thanks for the direct link.

Dr. Patty Khuly November 26th, 2007 04:06:00 PM

To add on to what Xslf has said:

I don't know if I could recall the hundreds and thousands of times that a client in our hospitals has asked if it is ok to just "get the antibiotics" instead of coming in for an exam AND then the number of veterinarians who have given in and prescribed the antibiotics. It is really a sad situation. Rather than opt for a culture and sensitivity test to determine the species of bacteria and best course of action, so many would rather continually shell out $20-30 for antibiotics every 6-8 weeks and allow the pet to suffer as well as select for the "bad bugs". To be fair, I have also seen many veterinarians and veterinary staff avoid mentioning a culture and sensitivity screen because of a perception that the client can't pay. All in all,very sad!

The University of Missouri study should be very interesting. They are actually trying to divide the pet owners into 3 categories....those who work in the veterinary field with pets, those who work in human healthcare with pets, and finally, those who have pets but are not associated with the healthcare industries.

Tomcat1765 November 27th, 2007 10:41:00 AM

A study was recently published about a strain of MRSA in humans that was found to have originated on swine farms in the Netherlands:

http://www.cdc.gov/eid/content/13/12/pdfs/07-0384....

abc November 27th, 2007 06:04:00 PM

taMRSA madness is rampant now, and the media has the general public in a frenzy. Yes, MRSA can be quite serious, along with its lesser-known cousin VRE (Vancomycin resistant enterococcus). Current human guidelines mandate culture and sensitivity; and first-line treatment for MRSA is usually a relatively inexpensive drug; trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Septra, TMP-SMX). In most cases, simple good hygiene is the key to prevent spread--decontamination of soiled inanimate objects, proper covering of wounds, and scrupulous handwashing. Closing schools and canceling activities is overkill, and ridiculous. We all carry Staph. aureus on our skin as normal skin flora, so the potential is there for everyone to develop this superbug; particularly those who have received frequent and varied courses of antibiotics. (Remember this parents; next time you want your kid's pediatrician to give them an antibiotic for their sore throat--probably 90% are viral and won't respond to antibiotics, the only reason to treat with antibiotics is a positive Group-A Strep culture). I would assume the same guidelines should apply to our pets; culture & senstivity and cleanliness should be a given in suspected MRSA cases.

Shellie November 27th, 2007 09:01:00 PM

Oops--sorry about typos! Sometimes the fingers get ahead of the brain-wish I could go back and edit my errors.

Shellie November 28th, 2007 02:32:00 AM

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