What is a Staph infection?
Staphylococcus, or Staph, refers to a group of bacteria. The
most common type of Staph causing infection is called
Staphylococcus aureus, which often causes skin infections like
impetigo and boils. Staph can also cause infection of the
deeper skin layers (called cellulitis), bone infections, and
muscle or joint infections. Rarely, Staph may cause other
serious infections, such as internal infections (known as
abscesses), pneumonia, and heart infections.
How does it occur?
Staph aureus can live harmlessly in the nose and throat of
many people. It can cause infection when it gets into skin
through small cuts or scrapes, or through skin which may be
affected by conditions such as eczema.
What are the symptoms?
For common skin infections like impetigo or skin abscess
(boils), symptoms may include:
- a small, well-defined area of swelling and redness (similar
to a pimple)
- pain
- pus coming from the infected area
- yellowish crusting of the area.
Deeper skin infection (cellulitis) can result in:
- a larger, often less well-defined area of swelling, pain,
warmth, and redness
- fever.
How is it diagnosed?
Most skin infections can be diagnosed by your health care
provider based on the symptoms and appearance of the infected
area. At times, a culture of the pus coming from an infected
area can help determine the type of bacteria causing the
infection. Further testing can determine the best antibiotics
to use for treatment.
How is it treated?
For many skin infections, draining the pus from the area is
all that is needed. In other cases especially for impetigo
and cellulitis, many health care providers will also give 1 to
2 weeks of an oral antibiotic medicine. More serious
infections may require treatment in the hospital and
intravenous antibiotics.
Treating Staph infections has become more difficult in recent
years, as bacteria are starting to become resistant to the
more common antibiotics used. These resistant bacteria are
known as MRSA, which stands for "methicillin-resistant Staph
aureus." Your provider may want to have the pus tested to
check if the infection is caused by MRSA. If it is a MRSA,
alternative types of antibiotics will be chosen by your health
care provider.
How long will it last?
Impetigo usually gets better within 2 weeks. Impetigo may be
treated with topical or oral medicines. Boils will improve
within a week if the pus is drained. For deeper tissue
infections, such as bone, joint, muscle, lung, or heart
infections, your child will be hospitalized. Improvement of
these infections is usually seen within 3 or 4 days of
starting antibiotics. However, deeper tissue infections can
be very slow to completely heal.
How can I help prevent Staph infections?
Drug-resistant Staph infections can become a problem for some
children. Treatment of a skin infection does not always get
rid of Staph bacteria which may be living in the nose or
throat. Even if all of the bacteria were removed from your
child during treatment, because other family members may have
the staph bacteria in their noses and throats, your child may
continue to get the bacteria from contact with family.
There are treatment routines that involve taking medicine for
longer periods of time that can help remove drug-resistant
Staph bacteria from all members of your family. You should
talk to your health care provider about these treatments.
When should I call my child's health care provider?
Call immediately if:
- Your child has chills.
- Your child is in severe pain.
- Your child refuses to walk.
- Your child has an extensive rash associated with a Staph infection
- Your child is extremely tired or sleepy.
- Your child has a fever lasting more than 5 days.
Call during office hours if:
- You notice the infection spreading.
- Your child is not responding to antibiotic treatment within
3 to 4 days.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.