We are going to all die in the next ten years from...
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/...172817677.html
looks like bacterial resistance to antibiotics are starting to take over. We are all fucked
A new mom in South Carolina is the second person in recent weeks to contract a rare disease known as flesh-eating bacteria.
Lana Kuykendall, 36, from Piedmont had just returned home after given birth to twins when she felt severe pain in her leg, reports WYFF-TV. Her husband Darren rushed her to the hospital when they noticed an unusual spot on the back of her leg was spreading.
Lana Kuykendall has undergone four surgeries to prevent the bacteria from a syndrome known as necrotizing fasciitis from getting worse. The bacteria comes from a type of streptococcus, which also causes strep throat. In the infrequent cases that the bacteria makes its way to the blood, muscle, or lungs it can be life-threatening, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Lana Kuykendall is in critical, but stable condition. It is unclear how she contracted the bacteria.
"The sad part about it is that she hasn't gotten to see the babies for the first week of their lives," says Darren Kuykendall. "I talk to her every day. I tell her how good she's doing, and how strong she is, and that she's a fighter. She can make it." Friends and family are watching over the healthy twins.
Georgia graduate student Aimee Copeland, 24, grabbed national headlines after she contracted the infection from a zip-lining accident on May 1. She fell near the Little Tallapoosa River and the bacteria entered her body through a gash in her leg. Most of her left leg has been amputated, and she will also lose her fingers, according to a report in the Associated Press. Doctors are using a process that accelerates healing to save her palms.
Sean Helgesen says he got lucky in his battle with the bacteria in a Daily Beast article. A pulled muscle during a workout quickly escalated into excruciating pain, flu-like symptoms, and immobility in his arm. He was rushed into surgery and flesh from his shoulder to his hip was removed. The procedure saved his life, and underlines the necessity for rapid, aggressive surgery after diagnosis. Helgesen did not have any external cuts or scrapes and doctors concluded that the strep bacteria was present in his system when he pulled the muscle.
Lana Kuykendall, 36, from Piedmont had just returned home after given birth to twins when she felt severe pain in her leg, reports WYFF-TV. Her husband Darren rushed her to the hospital when they noticed an unusual spot on the back of her leg was spreading.
Lana Kuykendall has undergone four surgeries to prevent the bacteria from a syndrome known as necrotizing fasciitis from getting worse. The bacteria comes from a type of streptococcus, which also causes strep throat. In the infrequent cases that the bacteria makes its way to the blood, muscle, or lungs it can be life-threatening, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Lana Kuykendall is in critical, but stable condition. It is unclear how she contracted the bacteria.
"The sad part about it is that she hasn't gotten to see the babies for the first week of their lives," says Darren Kuykendall. "I talk to her every day. I tell her how good she's doing, and how strong she is, and that she's a fighter. She can make it." Friends and family are watching over the healthy twins.
Georgia graduate student Aimee Copeland, 24, grabbed national headlines after she contracted the infection from a zip-lining accident on May 1. She fell near the Little Tallapoosa River and the bacteria entered her body through a gash in her leg. Most of her left leg has been amputated, and she will also lose her fingers, according to a report in the Associated Press. Doctors are using a process that accelerates healing to save her palms.
Sean Helgesen says he got lucky in his battle with the bacteria in a Daily Beast article. A pulled muscle during a workout quickly escalated into excruciating pain, flu-like symptoms, and immobility in his arm. He was rushed into surgery and flesh from his shoulder to his hip was removed. The procedure saved his life, and underlines the necessity for rapid, aggressive surgery after diagnosis. Helgesen did not have any external cuts or scrapes and doctors concluded that the strep bacteria was present in his system when he pulled the muscle.
Say hello to Staph infections. SWEET, Penicillin kills it. Fuck me...MRSA shows up. Penicillin doesn't do shit...Sweet, Sulpha drugs kills it!
SERIOUSLY SRSA??!!??? Immune to Penicillin AND Sulpha? Umm...what can we do...Shit...there is NOTHING but to cut it out...IF you can.
Staph infections are the fastest adapting and nastiest infections. I've had MRSA and luckily caught it in time before I would have been hospitalized from it. They told me there is a new strand that is resistant to the Sulpha drugs as well (SRSA...or whatever they call it). Good times..
SERIOUSLY SRSA??!!??? Immune to Penicillin AND Sulpha? Umm...what can we do...Shit...there is NOTHING but to cut it out...IF you can.
Staph infections are the fastest adapting and nastiest infections. I've had MRSA and luckily caught it in time before I would have been hospitalized from it. They told me there is a new strand that is resistant to the Sulpha drugs as well (SRSA...or whatever they call it). Good times..
"Staph" is simply the orientation of the bacterial cells. To say that they're the fastest adapting and "nastiest" is simply untrue, because we don't know this at large yet. There have been findings of flexing bacterium that can switch from strept to staph, and vice versa. We're finding transcription factors and proteins that manipulate the orientation of the bacterial cells.
We're probably only aware of about 10% of harmful (to humans) bacteria presently. Bacteria will once again rule the world some day.
We're probably only aware of about 10% of harmful (to humans) bacteria presently. Bacteria will once again rule the world some day.
Last edited by Zackk; May 17, 2012 at 11:41 AM.
"Staph" is simply the orientation of the bacterial cells. To say that they're the fastest adapting and "nastiest" is simply untrue, because we don't know this at large yet. There have been findings of flexing bacterium that can switch from strept to staph, and vice versa. We're finding transcription factors and proteins that manipulate the orientation of the bacterial cells.
We're probably only aware of about 10% of harmful (to humans) bacteria presently. Bacteria will once again rule the world some day.
We're probably only aware of about 10% of harmful (to humans) bacteria presently. Bacteria will once again rule the world some day.
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99 Integra GSR
06 TSX
duck squad member #00003
99 Integra GSR
06 TSX
duck squad member #00003
Well I'm screwed anyway...I take a immunosuppressant and I am allergic to penicillin and sulfa drugs.
__________________
Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming ...."WOW! What a ride!!!!!"
LUNCH with THEOLDMAN...On a break for now...
Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming ...."WOW! What a ride!!!!!"
LUNCH with THEOLDMAN...On a break for now...



, that's a bit scary.