Emily65Roses,
Thanks for the info. I guess they can both reside in the same environment after all. I was so scared that I gave my Nephew pseudomonas. He died at 15 from CF. pseudomonas found a path to his brain and caused a brain abscess. But the doctor said that it didn't happen that way. She said that he could have given it to me yet it deos not show up in my lungs right now. But I am glad to know that both can survive together in the same enviroment. I'll watch out for it.
Many thanks.
Randford
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Emily65Roses</b></i>
I would put them in roughly the same category. I've cultured 2 or 3 different pseudomonas(es?) and one of staph at the same time since I was 16 years old. I might say the pseudomonas is worse, because it talks to other pseudomonas and says "Hey, this is an awesome place to set up camp, come visit." But they're in the same general area, in my opinion.
I imagine Amy might be able to answer that better than I can.
The real nasty ones that they tell you to look out for are MRSA and Burkholderia cepacia, generally. And even those can be lived around for some time, depending on the strain, your environment, your medical care, etc etc etc. (I myself have had MRSA since I was 16, and it hasn't caused too much trouble).</end quote></div>