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Eye On Vision

Considering LASIK? Diagnosed with glaucoma or cataracts?
Dr. Bill Lloyd shares advice and information on eye disorders and general eye care to help you see your best.

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WebMD Health News

Sunday, May 20, 2007

MRSA: Just a Matter of Time
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Eye specialists knew it would happen sooner or later.

Now we know it is sooner!

The first series of documented eye infections involving LASIK patients has appeared wherein each of the infections was caused by a highly-resistant bacterium: Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus - or MRSA for short. This organism is very hard to kill because it cannot be killed by ordinary antibiotics. Newer, stronger kinds of antibiotics are necessary. It's expensive and risky because someday MRSA will become resistant to these medications also.

Scared?

We've all heard the news stories about MRSA infections in hospitals. Germs from one patient are inoculated on other patients due to inadequate (or absent) handwashing. MRSA has moved outside the hospital and more and more emergency rooms are frequently encountering skin infections and abscesses loaded with MRSA.

Scared enough yet?

Scared enough to start washing your hands more often?

This new report in the American Journal of Ophthalmology describes 13 confirmed MRSA corneal infections in postop LASIK eyes. Nine of the 13 cases involved healthcare workers or similar hospital exposure.

As explained in an earlier blog, the LASIK flap never really heals, so there is always an open portal for contamination to occur.

Bottom line time: if you've had any kind of refractive surgery you've acquired a powerful reason to pay more attention to handwashing and personal hygiene.

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Posted by: Dr. Lloyd at 9:30 AM

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