Guest guest Posted May 9, 2006 Report Share Posted May 9, 2006 And why they're so hard to treat: http://www.totaljoints.info/BACTERIA_information.htm This article is speaking particularly about joint & knee replacement infections. But truly, this condition is affecting many of us who don't have replacement joints. Our bugs have just found another safe haven (eg. necrotic bone or sinuses that cannot protect themselves against the bacteria, much like an artificial joint can't) and goes undetected by docs. This quote below really tells it all. As far as why we can't get the treatment we really need: " The total cost for the 3500 - 4000 postoperative wound infections after total hip and knee replacements that occur annually in the USA is about 200 millions $$ " . (Spangehl 1999) 4,000 patients - $200 million dollars. Can you imagine what would happen if the knowledge were made public that a significant portion of the population were suffering from similar, but hidden infections? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2006 Report Share Posted May 9, 2006 Bacteria win, we lose. That's sure what it sounds like to me. Unfortunately, the people who end up needing hip replacements, are probably the ones that already have infections and compromised immune systems. The article's statistics on how rapidly and extensively one's bacteria get replaced by abx-resistant bacteria in hospital are really terrifying.- KateOn May 9, 2006, at 1:06 PM, penny wrote:And why they're so hard to treat: http://www.totaljoints.info/BACTERIA_information.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2006 Report Share Posted May 9, 2006 Yeah, if a hospital's bad, can you imagine the dental office? Almost every one of us is subjected to that environment regularly, and are treated by dentists who have no clue about these bugs. Dentists should be held to even higher standards than regular docs, but the opposite is true. Think about how many of us have had a minor fracture and go straight to an emergecny room for treatment? Even our doctor's office? Right there, we're giving the bugs an opportunity to get a head start. It's scary but we CAN win. Tony's proof that we can get better. It's just a matter of getting it right. And we can't really do that until we know what we're up against. We need better and more THOROUGH testing so we know what we're fighting exactly. It really comes down to that. Right now, we're kind of out here in the wilderness on our own. But eventually (sooner than later) we need to do what these guys are doing. http://www.lymediseaseassociation.org/index.html Just broaden it to cover all infectious agents, not limit it to one. In the meantime, let's keep trying to wake as many people up as possible to the damage being done by common organisms. penny > > > And why they're so hard to treat: > > > > http://www.totaljoints.info/BACTERIA_information.htm > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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