What is Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), asometimes referred to as a super staph infection, is a specific strain of the Staphylococcus aureus bacterium that has develope...
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Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), asometimes referred to as a super staph infection, is a specific strain of the Staphylococcus aureus bacterium that has develope...

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Ideas for keeping kitty out of the loop?
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Hi all. I'm the mom in a family with MRSA+ teen, so-far fine hubby and a cat. I think we are doing a lot of things right, although it is slow. Immune support with all the right supplements, constant vigilance when coming back into the home, separate towels, etc. Our poor boy was hardest hit - two gnarly boil / antibiotic episodes until he was diagnosed.
I am dealing with mild cross contamination of myself via hand-laundry (!) but silver-based first aid gel is keeping everything under control while I get cleaned up, and establish the new way we will now do laundry etc. I can tell my immune system is in better shape than his, I just got one or two little 'suspicious skin events' that I recognized by color (hot pink? purple? hmmm). My question is keeping the kitty healthy and free of bacteria on the surface of her fur? We do bathe her about every ten days for allergy reasons and fleas, (our allergies, not hers), but we use mild soap or natural flea soap without chemicals. She can also safely be wiped down with witch hazel, which has lots of alcohol in it (the show people fluff their animals up before showing with it, I recently learned). Are there some other ideas or methods we can use on her? Thanks for your input everyone. I am learning a lot here. Posted on 11/03/09, 06:11 pm |
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I know that if a pet has an injury or break in the skin, they are at risk of getting a skin infection just like us.
The 'carrier' aspect is the trickier one, I think, since obviously our cats and dogs are into everything! :) There's a study I just saw (on the mainstream news? maybe CNN or Time website?) that said cats can reinfect their owners and make things tricky during the 'clean the house and environment' phase... For cats (and possibly small dogs too) all the aromatic oils are very dangerous, since they clean their fur and cannot metabolize the oils in their liver. Essential oils which contain phenols are particularly toxic to cats and cause liver damage. Here's a full list from the cat website "messybeast.com": (regarding phenols) "These include Oregano, Thyme, Eucalyptus, Clove, Cinnamon, Bay Leaf, Parsley and Savory Essential oils which contain ketones cause neurological symptoms. These include: Cedar Leaf*, Sage*, Hyssop*, Cyprus*, Lavender, Eucalyptus, Mint ,Caraway*, Citronella ,Clove*, Ginger*, Chamomile, Thyme and Rosemary (those marked * give particular cause for concern). I would love to have some more ideas...
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