just generally speaking your body is often colonised with microbiota which are unable to do anything. Being methicillin-resistant (the M and R in MRSA does not make Staphylococcus aureus more potent nor more likely to go from a surface colonisation to an infection (
this link clarifies the stages) it just makes it hard to treat with existing antibiotics (note the word
resistant is not the same as impervious). Our bodies are often swarming with things (you only imagine you are clean) and that our natural barriers (skin being one, mucosa {where mucus come from, IE the wetness inside your nose} being another) prevent from getting into places where they shouldn't be (surgery is a great opportunity for these little fellas to get in where we don't want them).
So as I understand it (and although it was a while back when I did my biochem / microbiol degree) this isn't anything specific to worry about NOR is it anything you'd want to take antibiotics for (yet).
I would be guided by what the medical people say about your level of colonisation.
BUT here is what I'd do.
- make up your own saline solution with 9g per Litre of *boiled* tap water (yes, boiled for at least 1 minute)
- do not use table salt or that filthy pink crap, use cooking salt (it doesn't have the anti-caking agent). White is purity.
- when cooled bottle that in sealable and clean (no residues of other things) bottles (I use clear water bottles) to check visually for turbidity.
- get a big (no, really big) syringe and use that to flush your nasal passages
- method: draw up about 40ml of the saline mixture (I pour out ~100ml into a glass); then leaning over the sink with your head horizontal looking down gently place the nozzle of the syringe into your nose (just inside, don't jam it in) and (holding your breath) squirt it up there as hard as you can reasonably do with just thumb and forefingers. You'll feel it in behind your eyes if you've got it "just right". Now let that drain out and breath out again through your nose in a gentle and regular exhalation.
- repeat with the other nostril
if you do this once a day for a few days you'll have created an environment with some saline nature that will be highly unattractive to the bacteria. After a week or two you will probably find that swabs come back with no colonisation.
If you desire put a gram of baking soda into the mix when making up your liter.
here is my syringe, I got it from an auto-shop
View attachment 888929
you can lengthen the usage time of this by
- removing the plunger from it after use (and quickly rinsing the interior to remove saltwater
- as the lubricant on the plunger wears off, put a very small smear of Vaseline on the inside of the base of the syringe (which will eventually begin to accumulate at the top and can be cleaned by inserting a paper towel in there and rotation clean it (I use a chopstick as the tool)
apparently all that lab work had some benefits ;-)
NOTE: If the mix is too saline for you you'll know it by a subsequent salty feeling in your nose (if you've been surfing you'll know this feeling) and if its a bit "stingy" then it usually means you have not got enough salt in the solution. Simply add a little to the bottle.
Let me know how it goes.