| Literature DB >> 24872818 |
Maheen Z Abidi1, Nayantara Coelho-Prabhu2, James Hargreaves3, Tim Weiland3, Irminne Van Dyken3, Aaron Tande4, Pritish K Tosh4, Randall C Walker4, Nathan W Cummins4.
Abstract
Mucormycosis is a rare and often fatal invasive fungal infection mostly seen in immune-compromised individuals. A high index of clinical suspicion is necessary, so that effective preemptive therapy can be started, as timely intervention is crucial. In this series we present three cases of invasive mucormycosis in patients with underlying inflammatory bowel disease that had received therapy with immunomodulators prior to the infection. All three had varied clinical manifestations. We also review the literature of invasive mucormycosis in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24872818 PMCID: PMC4020554 DOI: 10.1155/2014/637492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1Operatively obtained jejunal tissue section from Patient 3, showing multiple broad hyphae (hematoxylin and eosin, original magnification 400x).
Figure 2Operatively obtained jejunal tissue section from Patient 3 with fungal elements stained dark against green tissue background (Grocott-Gomori methenamine-silver stain, original magnification 400x).
Summary of cases of invasive mucormycosis in patients with inflammatory bowel disease described in the literature.
| Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 | Case 4 | Case 5 | Case 6 | Case 7 | |
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| Age (y)/sex | 68/M | 52/F | 41/F | 37/M | 32/M | 59/F | 60/M |
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| Risk factor | Ulcerative colitis; diabetes mellitus | Crohn's disease | Crohn's disease; diabetes mellitus | Ulcerative colitis | Crohn's disease | Ulcerative colitis status posttotal colectomy 20 y prior to admission. | Inflammatory bowel disease |
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| Treatment for IBD | Chronic corticosteroids | Azathioprine and infliximab | Corticosteroids, mesalazine | Infliximab infusions, oral 6 mercaptopurine (6 MP), and oral and intravenous corticosteroids | Methotrexate, corticosteroids | Intravenous corticosteroids, oral 6-MP, and oral sulfasalazine | |
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| Initial symptoms | Fever, cough, and chest pain. Nonresolving pneumonia | Peritonitis followed by intestinal perforation | Nasal congestion, fullness, headache, and fevers | Exacerbation of underlying condition. | Severe abdominal pain. | Nonhealing periosteal lesion resembling pyoderma gangrenosum | High fever, nausea, vomiting, bloody diarrhea, and pain in right flank |
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| Presentation form | Pulmonary | Gastrointestinal | Sinus | Endocarditis; suspected hematogenous spread to lungs with multiple nodal lesions with central necrosis on chest computed tomography (CT) | Gastric perforation | Cutaneous | Disseminated |
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| Diagnosis of mucormycosis | Antemortem | Postmortem: colon tissue: hyphae suggestive of Mucorales, cultures positive for | Antemortem: sinus | Antemortem: histopathology of atrial endocardial vegetation showed mycotic hyphae. | Antemortem: abdominal wall: histopathology: many broad based nonseptate hyphae admixed with necrotic tissue. | Antemortem: | Antemortem: |
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| Treatment | Pneumonectomy | Voriconazole | Surgical debridement and extensive facial tissue resection. | Excision of intracardiac mass. | Surgical debridement, cholecystectomy. | Surgery not done due to medical complications. | Elective right nephrectomy, total colectomy. |
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| Outcome | Worsening of infection while on antifungals with spread to left upper lobe lung and pericardium. | Died | Alive, off antifungals, and immune suppression | Alive, off antifungals,and immune suppression | Died | Alive, off antifungals, and immune suppression | Died |
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| Year/reference | 2012 [ | 2010 [ | 2009 [ | 2007 [ | 2007 [ | 2002 [ | 1997 [ |