7 Everyday Biohazards


7 Everyday Biohazards

    Provided by Men's Health

    Even if avian flu never enters America, it's already in our heads. See, we checked with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and as of right now, the only verifiable pandemic is fear. But that's the thing with bugs, whether they're cutting-board bacteria or ultravirulent viruses: They are the ultimate invisible enemy, often infecting us with anxiety before they've triggered a single immune response.

    The key to staying safe -- and sane -- in a world crawling with germs is knowing which ones are worth worrying about. Ol' H5N1? Not unless you like your chicken so fresh that you raise your own. Bubonic plague? Only if you reside in New Mexico and play with prairie dogs. On the other hand, do you own a cellphone? Take a shower every day? If so, then we have some high-priority pathogens we'd like you to meet -- and, with our help, defeat.

    The Cellphone

    What's Lurking:
    Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

    Think of MRSA as staph on steroids -- it's resistant to most antibiotics and can be deadly if it enters the bloodstream. And even though MRSA usually hides in hospitals, at least 12 percent of the infections in 2005 occurred in the general community, often inside locker rooms.

    Another hot zone: Cellphones. When University of Arizona researchers tested 25 cellphones, 20 percent came up positive for MRSA. "When was the last time you cleaned your cellphone? I'm willing to bet never," says Charles Gerba, Ph.D., the study's lead researcher and coauthor of The Germ Freak's Guide to Outwitting Cold and Flu. "These things are very germy, especially the keypads and mouthpieces." Picture it: Every time you dial a number or send a text message, you're transferring the germs on your hands to your phone and then straight to your mouth.

    How to Beat it: Sanitize your cell once a week with Clorox disinfecting wipes (or any of the supermarket-brand clones). "The wipes won't get into the internal parts of the phone and damage it the way a spray might," says Gerba. If you want more peace of mind, consider Motorola's new i870 cellphone ($300 with a 2-year Nextel contract). The i870 comes treated with AgION Antimicrobial, a very fine ceramic powder coating that contains silver ions, the same substance that's woven into some gym apparel to help inhibit the growth of bacteria.

    The Shower

    What's Lurking:
    Methylobacter and Sphingomonas

    Germs thrive in warm, wet environments, which is why they like showering with you. When Norman Pace, Ph.D., a professor of molecular biology at the University of Colorado at Boulder, tested five plastic shower curtains -- including his own -- he discovered millions of microbes lining every square inch, with 80 percent being either Methylobacter or Sphingomonas. What makes this finding worrisome is that studies of indoor pools show that both bugs can form an aerosol and rise into the air. "There's no doubt the same phenomenon occurs in the shower, and thus we're breathing in these potentially harmful bacteria," says Pace, though exactly how harmful is unclear. "We know people get sick for reasons we can't put our finger on. This could be one of them."

    How to Beat Them: You could hold your breath while you lather up, or you could simply make your shower less inviting for infectious agents. For starters, pull the curtain all the way closed after you're finished. This will help prevent bacteria from thriving inside the plastic folds. Or, better yet, opt for a fabric shower curtain and an all-metal showerhead. "These types of organisms feed on the organic compounds that form on plastic," says Pace. They also like to gorge on skin cells and other organic material that sloughs off in the shower, so if you go with a cloth curtain, toss it in the washing machine once a month, using the hottest water the fabric can handle.

    Hospitals

    What's Lurking:
    Clostridium difficile

    Also known as C. diff, this bacteria has been causing diarrhea in hospitals for decades. Ironically, the bug remains dormant inside healthy people until they begin popping certain antibiotics, which eliminate beneficial bacteria that keep C. diff in check. But, as bad as it is to have the runs while relegated to a bedpan, there's a greater danger: Last winter, two studies in the New England Journal of Medicine identified a more virulent variation of C. diff. In an accompanying editorial, John G. Bartlett, M.D., chief of infectious diseases at Johns Hopkins University, notes that "this C. difficile strain produces 16 to 23 times more toxins."

    How to Beat it: If you're going to be laid up in the hospital for more than a day, make sure your menu includes yogurt that contains "live" or "active" cultures. You'll be ingesting L. acidophilus, one of those good bacteria that can beat C. diff but is killed off by antibiotics. "It's an amazing thing. The number of cases of C. diff has dropped dramatically since we started serving yogurt," says Jimmy McDaniel, M.D., a staff physician at Baxter Regional Medical Center, in Arkansas. "Take a teaspoon morning, noon, and night, just as you would regular medicine." Try our favorite brand of live-culture yogurt: Stonyfield Farms Organic Nonfat, laced with L. acidophilus and several other microbial MVPs.

    Airplanes

    What's Lurking:
    Norovirus

    Most cruises are all-you-can-eat . . . and all-you-can-expel, if Norovirus is on board. What most travelers don't realize, however, is that this bug can also hijack airplanes. A recent CDC study of a flight from London to Philadelphia shows that 9 percent of the passengers and more than half of the crew were stricken with diarrhea and/or vomiting within 18 to 60 hours of the flight.

    That norovirus could infect so many in so short a time doesn't surprise Mark Gendreau, M.D., an emergency-medicine specialist who studies aircraft infectious disease for the Lahey Clinic, in Burlington, Massachusetts. "When we look at how contagious a disease is, we calculate how many microorganisms of that species are required -- from less than one to 100,000 -- to produce an infection," he explains. "Norovirus has a dose of 0.6, which means a single bacterium can produce a very serious outbreak."

    How to Beat it: Assume that the flight attendants are infected. Because they interact with everyone on the plane -- and on any other flights they've been on that day -- the attendants are the most likely people to contract and transmit norovirus. So if they hand you a beverage, drink it with a straw. And if they serve you a prepackaged meal, sanitize your hands after opening it. Not packing Purell? Soap and water is fine, but avoid whichever restroom the flight attendants are using. Of course, you could escape norovirus only to catch a cold, especially if someone's hacking in your airspace. Dr. Gendreau's defense: "Typically, I'll turn the gasper [the overhead air vent] on at the lowest setting possible and aim it straight down so I don't feel the current," he says. "This circulates clean air without drawing germs toward you."

    Golf Courses

    What's Lurking:
    West Nile virus

    The water hazard at your golf course is also a West Nile hazard; it's where mosquitoes that carry the virus buzz around and breed. And while West Nile fever typically affects older, immune-compromised individuals, a newly identified condition called West Nile poliomyelitis can hit healthy adults in their 30s and 40s. "It's a very serious neuroinvasive disease that attacks the cells in the spinal cord that are responsible for motor strength and activity," says Taylor Harrison, M.D., a professor of neurology at Emory University. "Some people regain movement of their limbs; others don't recover as well."

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    Skeeved Out

    Recent Comments

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    11 comments

    RWilki7250 09:41:09 PM Aug 29 2008

    I would just like to clarify...MRSA is NOT a virus. It's a bacteria. Two completely different things. I saw that AOL was posting this site stating that "20% of cellphones have this virus on them".

    SBestPA 06:51:40 AM Aug 25 2008

    It seems AOL Health news is about as technically accurate as network news. It would help to provide people with accurate information that is credible, not just stuff like this to stimulate conversation among those not in-the-know. MRSA is Staph aureus, a bacteria common on the skin. Staph lives on your skin from infancy to death and cannot be eradicated from you body...it is considered normal flora. Staph is a bacteria, not a virus, and therefore is completely different. This first most basic misinformation is the thing that identifies your article's author as an idiot. MRSA is Staph aureus (SA) that is methicillin-resistant (MR)...therefore MRSA. Methicillin is a high end penicillin and therefore MRSA is resistant to penicillin antibiotics and there cousins, the cephalosporins. MRSA is no more likely to cause an infection than typical SA, but it can be more difficult to treat. In the past, simple skin infections could be treated with a pencillin or a cephalosporin. Now, diff

    stangftl 05:31:13 AM Aug 25 2008

    WHEEW !!...I've been busy all night. I burned all my clothes. I ripped up all the carpet, and burned it, too (cough, cough). I sealed all the doors and windows with duct-tape, and I boiled the cat. I've GOT to get some sleep...right after I have a beer and a cigarette...

    RobertWMcMaster 01:43:34 AM Aug 25 2008

    Most people couldn't tell you the difference between a bacteria and a virus. I am assuming that most, if not all, of the people who have posted comments and corrections about the AOL writer calling MRSA a virus are either in the health field, or another biological field. I myself am a Biochem student, an have been focusing my studies on pathogenic bacteria, but to most people they are all just another germ, that they fervently hope their physician can cure. Yes, the writer should have gotten his/her facts straight, and yes, this article does try to make these pathogen resivors seem like an iminent threat, but consider that that is how most articles are. They want to make headlines and create sensationalism, even if they have a more mundane topic.

    KipECS 12:34:45 AM Aug 25 2008

    That's what AOL and the media in general is all about, instilling fear and what Hollywood star has the most droopy t i t s on a Ritz !

    KipECS 12:27:47 AM Aug 25 2008

    Hot Dang, the AOL intern wanna be reporter had better get his or her facts straight. We all know the difference between a bacterial and a viral infection, what's with the idiot AOL reporter not knowing such a fact? And beside that, they left out the part that you can only get this bacterium from a Sprint phone .... Or one of the ***** that works for Sprint !

    JDR94 11:33:29 PM Aug 24 2008

    Type your own comment hereOK, to echo the earlier comment, MRSA is indeed a bacteria, not a virus ( the implications of this little nuance are vast as there ARE antibiotics to treat it). Also, despite the recent news frenzy, MRSA has been around for YEARS!!! We treat any presumed staph infection if it is MRSA and have been doing so for some time now. Also, some food for thought: the frequency of resistant bugs goes up the more antibiotics these organisms are exposed to. And since 100% of human beings have staph living on their skin at all times, you might want to think about this everytime you are demanding antibiotics from your doctor for your two days of the sniffles (a viral upper respiratory illness). The more we use antibiotics unnecessarily for illnesses that will not be cured by them, the more resistant bug news you'll be hearing about.

    JetCharter1 11:21:49 PM Aug 24 2008

    Let me get this right..Norovirus is a contagion in the quantity of LESS than 1 to 100,000. Isn't less than one equal to ZERO? As for avoiding the flight attendants to protect yourselves, fine..don't drink or eat anything or use the rest room on your next flight of 4 hours! Watching out for wet areas on a golf course to avoid mosquitos...AOL's real answer.. Buy Tommy Hilfiger golf clothes with permethrin (a neurotoxin). It also looks like we'd better watch out for catching Chlamydia at hpme from our faithful partners. Guess we should just give up sex. Some good points were made though, but my tip to you is just to use common sense. Don't let articles that sensationalize modern problems rule you life. AOL, you've done it AGAIN!

    Jdwillard 10:08:10 PM Aug 24 2008

    Stop peddling fear!! Why don't you report on important news, like the fact that overuse of antibiotics, hand sanitizers, and anti-bacterial soaps reduces our bodies' ability to fight off infections in the first place. All you are doing is peddling fear and some huge corporation's product. BTW there is a war going on and Americans are needlessly being killed; let's see more reports on REAL news.

    Dmx22pac 09:19:09 PM Aug 24 2008

    In the case of Norovirus, Purell or any other alcohol-based antimicrobial will not work against it. Soap and water do not eliminate the virus either, just washes it away. To effectively eliminate Norovirus, a bleaching agent has to be used.Norovirus is something someone can get just by sitting on a toilet seat and is still viable for days to weeks outside a host.

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