Blood and puss from my belly button?!


Question: Blood and puss from my belly button!?
yesterday around 6pm i went to the store, and my belly button started to really hurt!. so i was at the counter, and started feeling around my belly buton through my shirt!. when i got home, i took off my shirt and there was blood all over!.

after looking at my for awhile, my mom took me to the ER!. they gave me some antibiotics and such, but didnt tell me WHAT caused it!. it was infected, that much they know!. they swabbed it and are testing it for MRSE (staff infection)!. but what in gods name happened to me!?

was there warning signs!? here is a possible one!. for months, my belly button smelled!. i thouhgt it was normal, like just sweat in there!. but my mom told me that a bad smelling belly button is not good!. any way that could be related!? WHAT DO I HAVE!?Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
MRSA is scary as it can creep up at any time!. It's (belly button)
a nice warm place for germs and bacteria to rest in - and if you got a cut there or an ingrown hair it could happen!.

The important part is you got medical help and medicine!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA, often pronounced "mersa") is a bacterium responsible for difficult-to-treat infections in humans!.

Surface sanitizing!.!.!.!.!.!.
Alcohol has been proven to be an effective surface sanitizer against MRSA!. Quaternary ammonium can be used in conjunction with alcohol to extend the longevity of the sanitizing action!.[39] The prevention of nosocomial infections involves routine and terminal cleaning!. Non-flammable Alcohol Vapor in Carbon Dioxide systems (NAV-CO2) do not corrode metals or plastics used in medical environments and do not contribute to antibacterial resistance!.

In healthcare environments, MRSA can survive on surfaces and fabrics, including privacy curtains or garments worn by care providers!. Complete surface sanitation is necessary to eliminate MRSA in areas where patients are recovering from invasive procedures!. Testing patients for MRSA upon admission, isolating MRSA-positive patients, decolonization of MRSA-positive patients, and terminal cleaning of patients' rooms and all other clinical areas they occupy is the current best practice protocol for nosocomial MRSA!.


It is not entirely certain why this strain has become so successful, whereas previous strains have failed to persist!. One explanation is the characteristic pattern of antibiotic susceptibility!. Both the EMRSA15 and EMRSA16 strains are resistant to erythromycin and ciprofloxacin!. It is known that Staphylococcus aureus can survive intracellularly,[60] and these are precisely the antibiotics that best penetrate intracellularly; it may be that these strains of S!. aureus are therefore able to exploit an intracellular niche!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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