MRSA is actually covered in the cited links. Here’s one for example academic.oup.com/ofid/article/6/7/ofz288/5522275.
The gut microbiome regulates the entire body, including the immune system and other body site’s microbiomes humanmicrobiome.info/systemic. You can see what a great resource it is – very handy to provide categorized citations.
his website is not peer reviewed
Anyone is welcome to contribute and peer review it.
godzillabacter@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Yes, it covers intestinal colonization with MRSA. Unfortunately Staph aureus is an uncommon GI pathogen, and the majority of detrimental infections secondary to MRSA come from skin-flora translocation to produce surgical site infections/blood stream infections, as well as translocation from the nares into the lungs to produce pneumonia. We thankfully have another method of nares decolonization. While metallobetalactamase producing Pseudomonas is mentioned as well, I have a very low suspicion that FMT would be useful for resistant Pseudomonal pneumonia or diabetic foot infections/osteomyelitis. FMT certainly has a role to play in ID, particularly for enteric gram negatives and VRE within the alimentary canal, but is not a cure-all for antimicrobial resistance.