MRSA Skin Infections and Treatments
Dermatologists, doctors and emergency department physicians typically give two treatments for treating methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). For simple abscesses or boils, incision and drainage alone is likely to be the best treatment, but antibiotics should be used in patients with cellulitis, patients with signs or symptoms of systemic infections, or even those with diabetes or compromised immune functions. In the USA there over 300 strains that interfere with the white blood cells that assist in fighting infections.
Treatment for MRSA skin infections are normally performed by a healthcare professional. They would drain the infection and in some cases prescribe oral antibiotics. Some clinicians suggest that drainage can be performed at home, using warm compresses or soak in the tub. Then again, some say do not attempt to treat MRSA skin infections by your self due to spreading to others or worsen the infective site, (examples of in home treatment: popping, draining, or using disinfectants on the area). If given antibiotics for treatment, be sure to take all of the doses unless your physician tells you otherwise.
If the infection is not getting better or worsen with in a few days of visiting your doctor, contact them again. A follow-up plan with your doctor is important. If other people live in the same house hold as you and they get the same infection, tell them to go to a healthcare provider and get treated. It is possible to repeat infections with MRSA, so making sure proper care and treatment are done can help infections from coming back.
MRSA skin infections can develop into more serious infections like invasive bacteremia, endocarditis, bone and joint infection and pneumonia. Treating server MRSA infections, first contact an infectious disease specialist. Treatments may include surgical or antimicrobial interventions.
Antibiotics routinely prescribed no longer work