|






| |
Most bugs that infect your eyes, nose, throat, large airways and bowels are
viruses, against which antibiotics are powerless. The New York Times ran an
article on over-prescription March 15th of 2005:
"You've had a cold for five to seven days and
thought you were getting better. Then it grew worse. More congestion,
increasing fatigue and now headache or facial pain around your nose or eyes
or upper teeth. You guessed it was a sinus infection.
Depending on the severity of the symptoms, the doctor's examination and
inclinations about treatment, you may be prescribed an antibiotic.
But is this what you need to get better?
Chances are, it is not. Most cases of acute sinusitis are caused by viruses,
not bacteria, and taking an antibiotic does nothing more than enrich the
pharmaceutical companies and increase the chances of being infected with
drug-resistant bacteria.
The average adult catches two or three colds a year, and 0.5 to 2 percent of
them are complicated by bacterial infections. In other words, if antibiotics
are prescribed for most sinusitis cases, they are most likely being way
over-prescribed."
Viruses cause the great majority of respiratory infections: ìcolds,î sinus
infections and sinusitis (inflammation of the air-spaces in your skull),
bronchitis (inflammation of the largest airways leading to you chest), and sore
throats), as opposed to bacteria, which are much less common.
-
Bacteria are living creatures: single-celled
animals with cell-walls very different from ours, and nuclei using very
different life-processes. Because these living things are so different
from us, it is easy to make medicines which kill bacteria yet spare humans.
These medicines are called ëantibiotics.'

-
Viruses, on the other hand, are infinitely
smaller, and are not living things. Instead, they are snippets of
DNA in a little envelope, that drift from sneeze to sneeze. When they
land in your throat, they slip into your own cells, which begin copying the
virus and spitting out new envelopes. The only things to kill here are
your cells, making it dangerous and difficult to invent medicines to stop
viruses. Instead, this is done efficiently and selectively by your own
immune system.

As for the symptoms of viral infections:
-
Green or yellow color to your
mucous comes from your own infection-fighting cells.
-
Fever is created by your body as a
defense, as it is harder for an infected cell to copy the virus at higher
temperatures.
-
Productive coughs help clear the
battlefield of dead cells, infection-fighting mucous, and virus particles coated
in antibodies.
-
Pressure in your face comes as
swollen nasal-tissues block the drains for your sinuses, and pressure builds
inside.
The only way to prove an infection is
caused by bacteria is to take a swab and see if anything will grow in a culture.
Signs that your infection is more likely to be bacterial are:
-
High temperature.
-
Pain localized to one sinus, or one
ear.
-
Bloody nasal discharge.
-
Sore throat without cough or runny
nose.
-
Duration of infection longer than 5
days.
-
Shortness of breath, with rapid
breathing and heart-rate.
Since antibiotics
can do nothing against a virus, giving them when not needed only increases
bacterial resistance and can even be harmful to you. Antibiotic-resistant
bacteria are frequently in the news, and are a serious problem. This
problem was entirely created by physicians being too liberal with antibiotics.
While you're waiting for your own immune system to get you better, here's a
copy of our
Viral URI Prescription for your use at home, and a link to an AAFP
handout on Viral
Respiratory Infections.
|