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Natural
Medicine and the Treatment of Methicillin Resistant
Staphylococcus Aureus – MRSA
By
Thomas A. Kruzel, ND
A
normal bacterium found on the body, Staphylococcus
aureus, has developed into a deadly warrior
against current antibiotic treatment. Hospitals
and extended care facilities have become unwitting
breeding houses of Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus
aureus where patients and caregivers are desperate
to find a solution to these resistant bacteria.
Treatment with natural therapies is proving
to be more effective than conventional treatment.
Methicillin
resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a
bacterium that has become resistant to antibiotic
therapy, the mainstay in medicine for treatment
of infections. Resistance has occurred because
of excessive use of antimicrobial cleaning agents
and antibiotic therapy, especially in hospital
and extended care facilities. Therefore, individuals
infected, have no line of defense except for
their own immune systems against MRSA. If, for
whatever reason, the person’s immune system
is functioning at a lower level, MRSA can induce
considerable morbidity, eventually resulting
in chronic debilitating illness or death.
Once
the scourge of hospital and extended care facilities,
MRSA has moved into the community at large and
is now being seen in athletes and among children
in school following injuries that break the
skin. Risk factors for developing MRSA are hospitalization,
residence in a long-term care facility, chronic
lung, vascular or liver disease, patients on
dialysis, malignancy, and prolonged exposure
to antibiotics. However, healthy friends and
family members who visit their loved ones in
hospitals and extended care facility are now
also susceptible to MRSA.
An
infection with S. aureus can occur anywhere.
Skin and soft tissues are commonly seen, but
respiratory tract, urinary tract, and endovascular
infections are also found. Additionally, S.
aureus is one of the most common infective organisms
found with osteomyelitis, and infection of bone
tissue in children as well as adults. This usually
occurs because the organism has passed through
the blood and set up house keeping there or
the site has become infected following a fracture
or surgery for a hip or knee replacement. Staphylococcus
aureus infections have been linked to Toxic
Shock Syndrome, Staphylococcal Scalded Skin
Syndrome, food poisoning, and infections following
sinusitis or soft tissue infections of the face.
Natural
therapies such as herbal medicines, homeopathy,
hydrotherapy, oxygen therapy and macronutrients
have been used clinically to fight MRSA infections.
They mainly enhance immune system function but
also possess antibacterial properties that antibiotics
do not, thus making them more effective against
S. aureus and MRSA. Herbal medicines such as
Echinacea, Goldenseal, Myrrh, Berberis, Phytolacca,
Astragalus and others do not attack microorganisms
by one method only but possess multiple methods
of attack. These range from actual germicidal
activities to preparing S. aureus for attack
by T and B lymphocytes (opsonization), and providing
specific binding sites on the organism for the
binding of complement and immunoglobulins. Taken
altogether, no microorganism has demonstrated
the capacity to mutate to such an extent as
to overcome a multi-pronged attack, which is
why herbal medicines have an excellent track
record against S. aureus and MRSA. When used
in conjunction with other therapies such as
homeopathy, macronutrient therapy or hydrotherapy,
their effectiveness increases considerably.
Natural
therapeutics for treatment of S. aureus and
MRSA while effective, require longer periods
of time in order to be successful. This is simply
because they act to stimulate the body’s
own healing mechanisms by requiring proper nutrition
and stimulation of an often depleted immune
system. Once accomplished, the patient ends
up with a stronger immune system that is better
able to fight off microorganisms like S. aureus
and MSRA.
Rockwood
Natural Medicine Clinic (RNMC) is a naturopathic
family practice facility. RNMC was founded in
1991 as a primary care/family practice clinic
in Portland, Oregon with a mission was to provide
safe, sensible and effective natural medicine
for the entire family. In 2000 RNMC relocated
the clinic to sunny Scottsdale, Arizona where
it is a model for students and physicians to
attain further education. Dr. Thomas Kruzel
and Dr. Robyn Conte are dedicated to educating
and training the next generation of healthcare
providers. For more information about RNMC,
please visit www.rockwoodnaturalmedicine.com.
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If you'd like more information about this topic,
or to schedule an appointment with Dr. Kruzel
or Dr. Conte, please call Jeanne at (480) 767-7119
or e-mail her at RNMC9755@yahoo.com.
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