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Softdreamer
06-03-2011, 12:33 PM
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-13632369


A new strain of the MRSA "superbug" has been found in British cows and is believed to be infecting humans.

Environmental campaigners say the new strain has emerged because of the over-use of antibiotics by dairy farmers.

Dr Mark Holmes of Cambridge University, who led the research, said this was a "credible hypothesis".

The researchers, writing in the Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal, say there is no additional health risk from eating milk and dairy products.
'Financial pressure'

MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a drug-resistant form of a usually harmless bacterium which can be deadly when it infects wounds.

The 35 or so strains of antibiotic-resistant superbugs are genetically fairly similar. However, this new variety is very different and it is thought that it might have first emerged from cows.

Its discoverers have dubbed it "New MRSA"

Antibiotics are widely used by dairy farmers to treat cows with mastitis. However over-use means some bacteria become resistant and difficult to treat if humans become infected.

Dr Holmes said the problem might be exacerbated by financial pressures on diary farmers.

"If you drive your cows harder to produce more milk you get more mastitis," he told reporters at a news conference.

The Soil Association has called for a complete ban on routine use of antibiotics in farming.

Soil Association director Helen Browning said: "Dairy systems are becoming ever more antibiotic-dependent. We need to get farmers off this treadmill, even if that means that milk has to cost a few pennies more".
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“It does appear that the numbers are rising”
Dr Mark Holmes Cambridge University

National Farmers' Union chief dairy adviser Rob Newberry said the health and welfare of cows were of "paramount importance" to British dairy farmers.

"In the interests of human and animal health, and animal welfare, it is important that veterinary medicines are administered as little as possible but as much as necessary," he said.

"Any antibiotic or veterinary medicine being administered to a food producing animal has strict conditions of use, including milk and meat withdrawal times, and in general, under European law, would only be available under prescription."

Dr Holmes and his colleague Dr Laura Garcia-Alvarez discovered the new strain while studying a bacterium known to cause mastitis in cows.

They found that, like other MRSA strains, it was resistant to the most commonly used antibiotics. However, the bug was found to be genetically very different.

Subsequent research showed that the strain was also present in humans.

Dr Garcia-Alvarez says that finding a new strain in both in humans and cows is "very worrying".

"Workers on dairy farms are at higher risk of carrying MRSA but we don't yet know if this translates to a higher risk [of them becoming ill]," she said.
'Very low risk'

Dr Holmes said very few people had been infected with the new strain, probably fewer than 100 a year in the UK. "But it does appear that the numbers are rising," he says.

The Health Protection Agency said the risk of becoming infected with the new strain was "very low".

Dr Holmes and Dr Garcia-Alvarez will now investigate the prevalence of the new strain and whether it is more or less harmful than current strains.

They also plan to conduct studies on farms to look for more MRSA strains of this type and explore any potential risks to farm workers.

MRSA is often found in hospitals and was linked to 1,593 deaths in 2007.

Since then the number of suspected fatal cases has fallen dramatically. There were 1,290 in 2008 and 781 in 2009.

A Department of Health spokesman said: "From the available evidence, we understand this new form of MRSA is rare in the UK and is not causing infections in humans.

"However, our expert committee, ARHAI, will be reviewing this issue at their next meeting and will consider potential medical, veterinary and food safety issues."

A Food Standards Agency spokesman said the study did not provide direct evidence that humans were being infected with MRSA from cattle.

"The risk of contracting this new strain of MRSA through drinking milk is extremely low because the vast majority of cows' milk is pasteurised and the pasteurisation process destroys all types of MRSA," he added

Arkady Renko
06-03-2011, 12:36 PM
I think the people who want to fight against excessive antibiotics use should be awarded an order

Softdreamer
06-03-2011, 12:49 PM
"The unnecessary over use of mans developments will be his downfall"

Cant remember who said it, by jeez, they are spot on.

Teh One Who Knocks
06-03-2011, 01:57 PM
I think the people who want to fight against excessive antibiotics use should be awarded an order

Patients and doctors are both to blame. Someone gets the sniffles so they run to their doctor and demand antibiotics. And then instead of the doctor giving the patient a :slap: they actually prescribe the antibiotics just to shut the patient up.

Arkady Renko
06-03-2011, 02:02 PM
Patients and doctors are both to blame. Someone gets the sniffles so they run to their doctor and demand antibiotics. And then instead of the doctor giving the patient a :slap: they actually prescribe the antibiotics just to shut the patient up.

absolutely, I think that the problem is that people consider antibiotics some sort of miracle potion for all kinds of diseases and don't even stop to think that antibiotics only work for bacterial infections. Also, my wife tells me that many drug companies encourage doctors to prescribe their antibiotics for indications they're not actually made for, so as to maximize sales. We will be chin deep in shit if some of the nasty things like multiresistant pneumonia develop strains that don't even respond to the so-called reserve antibiotics.

Teh One Who Knocks
06-03-2011, 02:07 PM
Exactly...even with those super-antibiotics, they have found some strains of bacteria that don't respond to them. It's getting to be really scary.

Softdreamer
06-03-2011, 04:08 PM
The scary part for me is the discovery that bacteria often exchange genes with other similar bacteria to form new types. Imagine if MRSA and E-coli starting boinking together.

were fucked.
If a strain turns up that thrives inside the gut, in soil and resistant to anti-B's its end of days o'clock

Softdreamer
06-03-2011, 04:11 PM
"The risk of contracting this new strain of MRSA through drinking milk is extremely low because the vast majority of cows' milk is pasteurised and the pasteurisation process destroys all types of MRSA," he added

But a new strain of MRSA bred and allowed to saturate the dairy market would eventually cross markets directly into the food chain. Ive been on Dairy farms, the conditions are not sanitary until its bottled, until then cross contamination is rife.

Deepsepia
06-03-2011, 06:26 PM
Patients and doctors are both to blame. Someone gets the sniffles so they run to their doctor and demand antibiotics. And then instead of the doctor giving the patient a :slap: they actually prescribe the antibiotics just to shut the patient up.

Human overuse is a significant problem, but animal use is simply crazy. Lots of animals are on antibiotics routinely, and its cooking up some nasty shit.

On the human side, there's some interesting evidence that in countries where you can buy strong antibiotics over the counter (for example, Mexico), the diseases that you end up getting are much nastier and more likely to be antibiotic resistant.