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Infectio ; 23(1): 55-57, Jan.-Mar. 2019. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: biblio-975564

ABSTRACT

Las micosis rino-cerebral, rino-orbito-cerebral y sinusopulmonar ocasionadas por especies de Mucorales y de Aspergillus se constituyen como una causa importan te de infección fúngica invasora asociada a una mortalidad mayor al 30%. La coinfección por dos o más especies en la forma rino-orbito-cerebral es infrecuente. Se describe un paciente con linfoma no Hodgkin, expuesto a múltiples esquemas quimioterápicos, en remisión completa, que presentó micosis con compromiso rino-orbito-cerebral por Aspergillus sclerotiorum y Rhizopus microsporum de rápida progresión con necesidad de tratamiento quirúrgico agresivo y terapia anti fúngica sistémica y local.


Rhino-orbital-cerebral and pulmonary mycosis caused by Mucorales and Aspergillus species have become an important cause of invasive fungal infection, with a 30% overall mortality rate. Rhino-orbital-cerebral disease caused by two or more species is uncommon. We present a patient with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, ex posed to aggressive chemotherapy, under complete remission, with acute onset of rhino-orbital-cerebral disease caused by Aspergillus sclerotiorum and Rhizopus microsporum, treated with aggressive surgery and both local and systemic antifungal therapy.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Aged , Aspergillus , Rhizopus/virology , Signs and Symptoms, Respiratory , Mucorales , Mycoses , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin , Causality , Coinfection , Invasive Fungal Infections , Microsporum
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