Tag Archives: MRSA

Billy Idol, 66, fighting MRSA super bug: 80s rock icon asks fans to ‘think positive’

Billy Idol, 66, fighting MRSA super bug: 80s rock icon asks fans to ‘think positive’ as he hopes to recover in the next few weeks

  • Billy Idol, 66, has been battling the MRSA super bug for several months
  • He revealed in a series of tweets that he is on two new types of antibiotics and hopes to be recovered in the next two weeks
  • MRSA ‘is caused by a type of staph bacteria that’s become resistant to many of the antibiotics used to treat ordinary staph infections,’ according to Mayo Clinic
  • The 80s rocker has already undergone several procedures to heal from his chronic sinus infection
  • The MRSA forced him to cancel his upcoming tour with Journey 

80s rock legend Billy Idol is battling a scary medical condition, the MRSA super bug, which is known to be resistant to antibiotics.

The 66-year-old updated fans on his health in a series of tweets Sunday and Monday, revealing that he hopes his severe sinus infection will be cleared up in the next two weeks. 

Last month, the White Wedding singer was forced to bow out of his upcoming tour with Journey due to the chronic infection. 

Get well soon: 80s rock legend Billy Idol is battling a scary medical condition, the MRSA super bug, which is known to be resistant to antibiotics

The rocker, whose real name is William Michael Albert Broad, tweeted out a health update on Sunday, asking fans for their positive thoughts.

‘Had further sinus procedure but now need to have the IV treatment as MRSA I have is resistant to oral antibiotics.. lets see if this works.. probably will.. think positive,’ he wrote.

Luckily, it seemed the procedure did work and Billy Idol didn’t need to have the intravenous treatment. He told followers in a subsequent post the following day that he was able to try to other oral medications.

He penned: ‘Medical update correction: I have to take a further 2 types of antibiotics to beat this MRSA sinus infection no intravenous just by mouth… 2 more weeks to go yuk! Still I should b ok after this…’

On the mend: The 66-year-old updated fans on his health in a series of tweets Sunday and Monday, revealing that he hopes his severe sinus infection will be cleared up in the next two weeks

Billy has been dealing with this illness since December 2021 and began getting sinus procedures in February. Three weeks ago, doctors went in to ‘remove infection & blood clots’ in his sinuses.

‘It turns out I had a MRSA infection resistant to most antibiotics,’ Billy told fans at the time. 

MRSA, or Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, ‘is caused by a type of staph bacteria that’s become resistant to many of the antibiotics used to treat ordinary staph infections,’ according to the Mayo Clinic. 

Billy’s bout with MRSA forced him to back out of a planned tour with the band Journey.

What is it? MRSA, or Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, ‘ is caused by a type of staph bacteria that’s become resistant to many of the antibiotics used to treat ordinary staph infections,’ according to the Mayo Clinic

He announced the cancelation of his performances on Twitter in early February saying he was ‘gutted’.

‘I haven’t felt like myself since mid-December with a sinus infection that won’t respond to medication,’ Billy wrote at the time. 

‘It has worsened to the point where I have no choice but to have a procedure which I expect will put me on a path to recovery very soon,’ he explained.

‘The last thing I ever want to do is cancel shows and I am absolutely gutted that I won’t be able to perform with Journey as planned. 

He was replaced on the tour by Toto whom he thanked for stepping in.

‘Gutted’: Billy’s bout with MRSA forced him last month to back out of a planned tour with the band Journey

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MRSA Superbug First Developed Antibiotic Resistance to Methicillin in Hedgehogs 200 Years Ago

Antibiotics have been responsible for saving countless over the last century. But they’ve also put us into an evolutionary arms race with harmful bacteria. As more antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections, the bacteria itself faces more pressure to mutate into strains that can resist these antibiotics. Humans go back to the drawing board and develop more powerful antibiotics, the bacteria evolve resistance against those antibiotics, and so forth.

At least, that’s been the conventional wisdom for how antibiotic resistance develops. But a new study published in Nature on Wednesday paints a more complicated picture, showing that methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (better known as the superbug MRSA) evolved naturally 200 years ago—long before methicillin was ever introduced as a clinical antibiotic.

And the culprit responsible for MRSA might surprise you: hedgehogs. Behind those adorable faces and underneath those spiny exteriors, hedgehogs are basically living factories for producing MRSA.

Methicillin was first discovered as an antibiotic in 1959. The first reports of MRSA emerged in 1961 in the U.K. It usually takes decades for bacteria to evolve resistance to a popular antibiotic, so scientists have always been baffled by why it took less than two years for MRSA to pop up after methicillin was first introduced to the general population.

Meanwhile, it’s been known for a while that hedgehog bodies are vulnerable to fungal disease. In the last decade, there’s been a string of new research (spearheaded by Danish researcher Sophie Rasmussen) that’s shown hedgehogs in northern Europe carry both Staphylococcus aureus and a fungus called Trichophyton erinacei on their bodies. The fungus produces its own antibiotics to kill the bacteria, but some of these S. aureus strains have been able to evolve a natural resistance to those fungal antibiotics.

“This completely changed my perspective of how to look at MRSA and antibiotic resistance,” Jesper Larsen, a researcher at The State’s Serum Institute in Copenhagen and the lead author of the new study, told The Daily Beast. “It meant there must have been some selective pressures in hedgehogs that caused them to carry MRSA.”

Through nasal and skin swabs of hundreds of hedgehogs originating from wildlife rescue centers, the new study found that hedgehogs across Europe and New Zealand carry high levels of an MRSA strain called mecC-MRSA. Larsen and his team specifically found that up to 60 percent of all wild hedgehogs in Denmark and Sweden carry mecC.

Furthermore, using gene sequencing techniques that could help date the MRSA-specific mutations, the team was able to determine that mecC first emerged on hedgehogs two centuries ago—well before methicillin was first used to treat humans and farm animals.

Ultimately, the authors believe that hedgehogs began as the first reservoir for MRSA, and this explains why MRSA was so quick to spread to livestock and humans later on even when methicillin had only just been introduced.

To be clear, the authors do not discount the role clinical antibiotics may have played in helping the growth of MRSA, which leads to more than 80,000 cases and 11,000 deaths in the U.S. every year. While the World Health Organization classifies MRSA as one of 12 “priority pathogens that threaten human health,” only about 1 in every 200 MRSA infections in humans are caused by the mecC strain. It must have further evolved in order to better adapt to humans, though hedgehog strains were a fertile starting point.

Larsen cautions there should not be a huge concern that hedgehogs—domestic or wild—are going to suddenly infect us all with MRSA. “Apparently, we have been living with this problem in hedgehogs for 200 years, even before we had antibiotics,” he said. “So no, it’s not a big problem.”

But what the study does do, said Larsen, is provide new insight into understanding the current antibiotic crisis. Random mutations can appear all the time, but they only stick around when there’s pressure to keep them. In this case, hedgehogs seem to be the origin point for MRSA genes, but these antibiotics in humans have helped maintain those genes in certain S. aureus strains.

Larsen and his team are keen to know whether other interactions between antibiotic-producing fungi and bacteria are happening in other host animals as well. There’s a bit of hope these studies could lead to a breakthrough into developing a silver-bullet solution for MRSA and other superbugs—one that ends the evolutionary arms race permanently.

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Hedgehogs to Blame for a MRSA Superbug, Not Modern Antibiotics, Study Suggests

A woman handles a hedgehog on the first day of the Great Yorkshire Show near Harrogate in northern England on July 11, 2017.
Photo: Oli Scarff/AFP (Getty Images)

The origins of a notorious bacterial superbug can be traced back to hedgehogs that lived centuries ago, new research this week suggests. The study found evidence that one particular type of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, also known as MRSA, first emerged on the skin of hedgehogs. The bacteria likely evolved resistance in response to fungus also living on hedgehogs that naturally produced antibiotic compounds to kill off their competitors—long before humans began using antibiotic drugs to treat these infections.

MRSA is one of the most well-known examples of antibiotic resistance. The term refers to any strains of S. aureus that are resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics—a class of antibiotics that include methicillin but also many other drugs, including penicillin. S. aureus strains, including MRSA, live naturally on our skin and elsewhere, typically without causing trouble. But when these bacteria do cause illness, often among people hospitalized or in poorer health, MRSA infections can be much harder to get rid of with conventional treatments and can turn deadly.

Scientists discovered the existence of MRSA almost immediately after methicillin became the standard drug of choice for staph infections in the 1960s. But it wasn’t until the 1990s that MRSA became widely known, as rates of hospital-related cases climbed and strains spreading between people outside of hospitals began to emerge. There has been some progress in stemming the tide of MRSA within hospitals since then, though this progress may have slowed down in recent years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that almost 120,000 Americans contracted serious bloodstream infections of MRSA in 2017, while nearly 20,000 died as a result.

The widespread use of antibiotics in medicine and agriculture since the 1940s has fostered the emergence of drug-resistant infections, including MRSA. But a few years ago, scientists made a curious discovery: Hedgehogs living in Sweden and other European countries seemed to widely carry a form of MRSA known as mecC-MRSA. mecC-MRSA is thought to cause only a sliver of MRSA infections in humans, and while other animals have been documented to carry it, rates of colonization were much higher in these hedgehogs (around two-thirds had it). This led scientists at the time to theorize that hedgehogs have been a natural host for mecC-MRSA for at least decades.

This new research, published in Nature on Wednesday, has found genetic evidence that this timeline goes back much further. An international group of researchers from the UK, Denmark, Sweden, and elsewhere, including some of the first to document mecC-MRSA in hedgehogs and other animals, collaborated for the study. They sequenced the genomes of hedgehog MRSA strains and compared them to other S. aureus strains in order to build a likely family tree.

Near as they can tell, the lineages that first gave rise to the hedgehog-related MRSA we see today began in the 19th century, about 200 years ago. The team also found that a common fungus living on hedgehog skin, known as Trichophyton erinacei, can produce two different types of beta-lactam antibiotics. And in the lab, hedgehog MRSA strains did appear better able to survive against these antibiotics than other strains.

All told, the findings paint a picture as old as time.

“Our study suggests that it wasn’t the use of penicillin that drove the initial emergence of MRSA, it was a natural biological process. We think MRSA evolved in a battle for survival on the skin of hedgehogs, and subsequently spread to livestock and humans through direct contact,” said senior study author Ewan Harrison, a researcher at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the University of Cambridge and a senior author of the study, in a statement from Cambridge.

mecC-MRSA infections in humans are rare and are typically mild and easily treated with other antibiotics when they do happen. So even though these bacteria may have occasionally sickened us over the past 200 years, the findings shouldn’t make us fearful of hanging out with hedgehogs, the authors say.

But they do illustrate that the world is a smaller and more connected place than we might think. Because most antibiotics we use today are derived from natural sources, this may not be the only example of important antibiotic resistance that has existed prior to the antibiotic era of medicine. And we already know that antibiotic resistance found in other animals can have serious health consequences for humans. That said, while some animals may play host to their own native superbugs, our continued overuse of antibiotics in livestock also plays a major, if not leading, role in causing this resistance.

“These results underscore the importance of taking a broad One Health perspective on antibiotic resistance that recognizes the role of natural selection in wild animals and the connectivity of natural, agricultural and human ecosystems in the evolution and spread of antibiotic-resistant pathogens,” the researchers wrote.

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Legendary WWE wrestler Jimmy Rave, 38, reveals he had both legs amputated after suffering from MRSA

Legendary WWE wrestler Jimmy Rave revealed he had to have both of legs amputated after a recurring case of MRSA – only months after retiring because the staph infection forced doctors to amputate one of his arms. 

Jimmy Rave, 38, tweeted a jarring photo showing the professional wrestler laying in his hospital bed with both legs and his left arm removed because he was again diagnosed with Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus – a bacterial infection resistant to antibiotics. 

‘I have a history [with] this and would cancel shows often due to this condition,’ he wrote on Twitter on Sunday. 

‘I’ve gone this whole time not disclosing my legs because of this embarrassment’. 

Jimmy Rave, 38, revealed on Twitter on Sunday that he had both his legs amputated after contracting  Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) – a staph infection resistant to antibiotics and typically found in hospitals – in both legs 

The former pro wrestler is best known for his work in the Ring Of Honor, a live program featuring the ‘best-in-ring action’ and new styles that ‘developed by fresh, young stars that incorporates wrestling, mixed martial arts and high-flying’

The life-threatening staph infection that is resistant to treatment: What is MRSA?

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a type of bacteria that is resistant to several widely-used antibiotics, which makes it particularly hard to treat. 

Catching the infection early could prevent it spreading and infecting others.

Approximately 30 percent of people carry the Staphylococcus aureus bacteria even in their nose, armpits, groin or buttocks without realizing it.

This can invade the body’s bloodstream and release poisonous toxins that kill up to one-fifth of infected patients.

MRSA is most commonly associated with hospitals. 

As well as being highly drug resistant, current screening methods are fairly inaccurate, which allows the infection to spread as a patient moves around both within and outside hospitals.

Even when the infection is successfully treated, it doubles the average length of a patient’s hospital stay, as well as increasing healthcare costs.

The WHO recently classified MRSA as high priority on its list for the Research and Development of new drugs.   

Last December, Rave announced on his Instagram that he was ending his pro-wrestling career due to the amputation of his left arm. 

‘I have been very blessed for the last 21 years in professional wrestling and getting to live out my dream. Today, that dream has ended for me and I have a new reality,’ he wrote on Instagram on December 10, 2020. 

‘This post Tuesday [December 8], my world came crashing down when Doctors found an infection in my left arm. I tried toughing it out but by the time I saw a doctor it was too late and they had to amputate my left arm above the elbow.’ 

Approximately 30 percent of people carry staph infections – even in their nose, armpits, groin or buttocks without realizing it – but MRSA afflicts about two in every 100 people, according to health officials.

Athletes and those who receive inpatient medical care or have surgery or medical devices inserted in their body are at higher risk of MRSA infection.

If left untreated, the infection can invade the body’s bloodstream and release poisonous toxins that kill up to one-fifth of infected patients.

Pro wrestler Romain Vezirian wrote: ‘I hate that this happened to you. Going from being a huge fan of yours to sharing the ring with you remains the highlight of my career. We’re all rooting for you.’ 

Another pro, Jeremy Vain, also wrote encouraging words to Rave: ‘Brother you have done so much to help so many people including me that had nothing to do with wrestling. Hope you know I’m praying you remember your ability to help others. You did it before, now it’s just doing it a different way. I love you man. #Changelives.’

Rave claimed he withheld the knowledge about his legs due to an ’embarrassment’ and that there were ‘untrue things’ being spread around that the pro was suffering from ‘something else.’ 

A few days before he posted the picture of him laying in his hospital bed, the wrestler had posted a hospital bill for more than $100,000, with room and board alone costing the retired star $52,500, and asked his fans for help with the cost. 

Rave posted an astonishing $103,000 medical bill on Twitter last week asking his fans for help 

Rave himself was ‘wowed’ by the shocking $103,314,77 bill for therapy, lab work, pharmacy charges, room and board, and the alleged $8.50 a day to ‘use the 20 channel TV.’ 

Other pro wrestlers rallied around the star, with many begging their own followers to ‘help if you can.’ 

‘I’m really sorry this happened to you, you never failed any of us and you are an inspiration to all of us. The amount of things I’ve stolen from your work or knowledge you’ve given that I’ve quoted to others is priceless,’ fellow pro wrestler Toby Farley wrote. 

‘I don’t know where the rumors started this was due to something else, but I hadn’t been to shows for so long,’ he wrote on Twitter. ‘Pro Wrestling is all I ever loved. It sucks to think that the tribe I would have died for, would say untrue things about me.’ 

A GoFundMe page was set up to help Rave after his arm was amputated in 2020, with several new donations flooding in after his recent announcement. 

So far the page has raised $16,115 of it’s $20,000 goal. 

Rave was best known for his work with the Ring Of Honor – a live program featuring the ‘best-in-ring action’ and new styles that were ‘developed by fresh, young stars that incorporates wrestling, mixed martial arts and high-flying.’ 

The former pro-wrestler announced on his Instagram that he retired from the sport due to the amputation of his left arm in December 2020. He lost his arm to the same disease

Many other pro-wrestlers showed him love and support on Twitter and said he was an inspiration and that they were ‘rooting’ for him 

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