MRSA means methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Bacteria of the Staphylococcus aureus type occur on the skin and the mucous membranes of many healthy people. These bacteria may be resistant, i.e. insensitive, to the antibiotic methicillin and most other antibiotics.
MRSA usually only settle on persons without making them sick. The bacteria settle, e.g., in the nasal atrium, throat, armpits and groin. Only if these bacteria enter the body through wounds or mucous membranes can an infection occur. Since MRSA are (multi-)resistant to many antibiotics, the disease may be severe.
MRSA occur where antibiotics are used often, mostly in hospitals. In Germany, about 20% of all Staphylococcus aureus bacteria investigated in hospitals used to be multi-resistant. In recent years, a decline in the proportion of MRSA has been observed.
Person-to-person
Most frequently, the pathogens are passed on by direct contact between people. The main path of transmission is the hands.
Both MRSA patients and MRSA carriers, i.e. healthy persons with colonies of MRSA, are contagious. An MRSA carrier may also transfer bacteria to other regions on their own body, e.g. from the nasal atrium into a wound via the hands. There, they may cause the infection.
Via contaminated objects
Infection is also possible via contaminated objects such as door handles, hand rails, grips or bathing utensils. The pathogens adhere very well to plastic materials and stainless steel alloys, e.g. catheters.
Animal-to-person
Persons can also be infected by contact with affected farm animals.
Many MRSA carriers with colonies of the bacterium on their skin or mucous membranes exhibit no symptoms.
An actual MRSA infection may show itself in several ways. Possible symptoms include:
MRSA does not necessarily cause actual disease. Persons carrying MRSA may get sick if their immune system is weakened and the bacteria find a way into their bodies.
The sick persons are contagious as long as the pathogen can be documented.
For healthy persons, the risk of infection is low, even if their skin or mucous membranes already carry MRSA.
Persons with the following risk factors are affected more frequently:
Particularly in immune-compromised older patients and infants, MRSA progression may be severe.
During hospital visits:
In everyday life:
Your local health authority can provide you with further advice and information.
More (specialist) information is also available online from the Robert Koch Institute (www.rki.de/mrsa).
For more information on how hygiene can guard against infection, please visit the Federal Centre for Health Education website (www.infektionsschutz.de).