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Bacterial Infections

»Which bacterium is the most common cause of skin infections?
»What kinds of skin infections does Staphylococcus aureus produce?
»Is Staphylococcus aureus the only bacterium that causes impetigo?
»What does staphylococcal impetigo look like?
»Why is staphylococcal impetigo frequently bullous?
»How is bullous impetigo diagnosed?
»How is bullous impetigo treated?
»What is the difference between a furuncle and a carbuncle?
»How do furuncles present?
»What is the best way to treat furuncles?
»Why do some patients develop recurrent staphylococcal impetigo or recurrent furunculosis?
»How is staphylococcal carriage eliminated?
»What is staphylococcal scalded-skin syndrome?
»Describe the presentation of toxic shock syndrome.
»Why is S. aureus frequently found in secondary infections of dermatitis and wounds?
»What is MRSA?
»What is the difference between HA-MRSA and CA-MRSA?
»What types of cutaneous infections are produced by b-hemolytic streptococci?
»How does streptococcal impetigo present?
»What is ecthyma?
»What is blistering distal dactylitis?
»What is erysipelas?
»How do you diagnose erysipelas?
»How is erysipelas treated?
»Describe the cutaneous manifestations of Lyme disease.
»A patient living in an endemic area for Lyme disease reports a history of a tick bite. Should that patient receive antibiotic prophylaxis?
»What types of skin infections does Pseudomonas aeruginosa produce?
»How does ecthyma gangrenosum differ from ecthyma?
»Where do you usually acquire Pseudomonas folliculitis?
»How does Pseudomonas folliculitis present?
»What is the best treatment for Pseudomonas folliculitis?
»How is Wood’s light used in diagnosing Pseudomonas infections?
»What causes tularemia? Where did the name tularemia come from?
»Describe the skin lesions of tularemia.
»How should tularemia be treated?
»What is trichomycosis axillaris?

 
 
 

What is the difference between HA-MRSA and CA-MRSA?

In the past, most cases of MRSA were hospital acquired but, in recent years, a distinct subtype of MRSA has emerged in the community setting. The two MRSA types are known as hospital acquired and community acquired (HA and CA-MRSA). HA-MRSA tends to cause invasive and disseminated infections in hospitalized patients, hemodialysis patients, long-term care facility patients, and patients with implanted medical devices. These strains tend to exhibit resistance to a greater number of antibiotic classes than CA-MRSA. CA-MRSA causes the same spectrum of skin infections as methicillin-sensitive (MSSA) S. aureus, most commonly furuncules, boils, and abscesses; however, severe, invasive infections with CA-MRSA have been reported. Additionally, CA-MRSA tends to display a narrower spectrum of antibiotic resistance than HA-MRSA. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, tetracycline, and clindamycin are antibiotics that will often cover CA-MRSA, although inducible clindamycin resistance is fairly common in CA-MRSA isolates. Therapy is dependent on the severity of infection and the strain susceptibility, with empiric antibiotic coverage determined by prevalence of CA-MRSA in a given community. More serious and hospital-acquired cases are usually treated with vancomycin or linezolid.

Elston DM: Status update: hospital-acquired and community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Cutis 79(Suppl 6):37–42, 2007.