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Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection

Background: An epidemic of Mucorales was reported following the second wave of COVID-19 in India, and intracranial extension of the same was one of the most dreadful complications. Methods: A total of 62 patients with cerebral mucormycosis were recruited and followed up till 12 weeks to evaluate the...

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Autores principales: Patel, Masum, Panchal, Jigar, Desai, Chetna, Shah, Jaimin, Prajapati, Bela, Patel, Shubham
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9733781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36514560
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.31220
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author Patel, Masum
Panchal, Jigar
Desai, Chetna
Shah, Jaimin
Prajapati, Bela
Patel, Shubham
author_facet Patel, Masum
Panchal, Jigar
Desai, Chetna
Shah, Jaimin
Prajapati, Bela
Patel, Shubham
author_sort Patel, Masum
collection PubMed
description Background: An epidemic of Mucorales was reported following the second wave of COVID-19 in India, and intracranial extension of the same was one of the most dreadful complications. Methods: A total of 62 patients with cerebral mucormycosis were recruited and followed up till 12 weeks to evaluate the risk factors, incidence, clinical manifestations, management, and prognosis of cerebral mucormycosis. Findings: A median age of 51.5 years with male predominance (74%) was noted. The majority of subjects reported a history of COVID infection (93.5%) and diabetes mellitus (83.87%). The first symptom of mucormycosis appeared after a mean period of 17.63 ± 8.9 days following COVID. Facial swelling and ptosis were the most common symptoms. Only 55% of patients had neurological presentations, and hemiparesis was the most common neurological sign (30.6%). Radiologically, the involvement of maxillary sinus (90.32%) and ethmoid sinus (87.10%) was commonly noted. Cerebral findings included temporal lobe (50%) and parietal lobe (30.06%) involvement, cavernous sinus thrombosis (30.06%), and internal carotid artery thrombosis (22.58%). Acute cerebral infarction was notable in 37% of subjects (p-value=0.0015, significant association with the outcome). Conventional and liposomal amphotericin B were used in 91.94% and 53.23% of patients, respectively. Retrobulbar amphotericin injections used in 11.3% of subjects significantly affected the outcome (p-value=0.03, significant). Posaconazole step-down therapy was used in 72.5% of subjects (p-value=0.0005, significant). Surgical interventions were performed in 53 (85.48%) subjects (p-value=0.004, significant). Functional endoscopic sinus surgery was the most common (in 64.52% of subjects), followed by maxillectomy (20.97% of subjects) and craniotomy (17.7% of subjects). At the end of 12 weeks, 33.87% of patients died and 59.68% were alive; the rest (6.45%) were lost to follow-up. Interpretation: The absence or late presentation of neurological symptoms led to a delayed diagnosis of cerebral mucormycosis. The presence of acute cerebral infarction indicated a worse prognosis. However, there was a significant influence of step-down posaconazole therapy, retrobulbar amphotericin injections, and surgical intervention on the prognosis of cerebral mucormycosis.
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spelling pubmed-97337812022-12-12 Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection Patel, Masum Panchal, Jigar Desai, Chetna Shah, Jaimin Prajapati, Bela Patel, Shubham Cureus Otolaryngology Background: An epidemic of Mucorales was reported following the second wave of COVID-19 in India, and intracranial extension of the same was one of the most dreadful complications. Methods: A total of 62 patients with cerebral mucormycosis were recruited and followed up till 12 weeks to evaluate the risk factors, incidence, clinical manifestations, management, and prognosis of cerebral mucormycosis. Findings: A median age of 51.5 years with male predominance (74%) was noted. The majority of subjects reported a history of COVID infection (93.5%) and diabetes mellitus (83.87%). The first symptom of mucormycosis appeared after a mean period of 17.63 ± 8.9 days following COVID. Facial swelling and ptosis were the most common symptoms. Only 55% of patients had neurological presentations, and hemiparesis was the most common neurological sign (30.6%). Radiologically, the involvement of maxillary sinus (90.32%) and ethmoid sinus (87.10%) was commonly noted. Cerebral findings included temporal lobe (50%) and parietal lobe (30.06%) involvement, cavernous sinus thrombosis (30.06%), and internal carotid artery thrombosis (22.58%). Acute cerebral infarction was notable in 37% of subjects (p-value=0.0015, significant association with the outcome). Conventional and liposomal amphotericin B were used in 91.94% and 53.23% of patients, respectively. Retrobulbar amphotericin injections used in 11.3% of subjects significantly affected the outcome (p-value=0.03, significant). Posaconazole step-down therapy was used in 72.5% of subjects (p-value=0.0005, significant). Surgical interventions were performed in 53 (85.48%) subjects (p-value=0.004, significant). Functional endoscopic sinus surgery was the most common (in 64.52% of subjects), followed by maxillectomy (20.97% of subjects) and craniotomy (17.7% of subjects). At the end of 12 weeks, 33.87% of patients died and 59.68% were alive; the rest (6.45%) were lost to follow-up. Interpretation: The absence or late presentation of neurological symptoms led to a delayed diagnosis of cerebral mucormycosis. The presence of acute cerebral infarction indicated a worse prognosis. However, there was a significant influence of step-down posaconazole therapy, retrobulbar amphotericin injections, and surgical intervention on the prognosis of cerebral mucormycosis. Cureus 2022-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9733781/ /pubmed/36514560 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.31220 Text en Copyright © 2022, Patel et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Otolaryngology
Patel, Masum
Panchal, Jigar
Desai, Chetna
Shah, Jaimin
Prajapati, Bela
Patel, Shubham
Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title_full Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title_fullStr Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title_short Emergence of Cerebral Mucormycosis in the Post-COVID Period: A Detailed Analysis of Risk Factors, Clinical Progression, and Management of This Opportunistic Fungal Infection
title_sort emergence of cerebral mucormycosis in the post-covid period: a detailed analysis of risk factors, clinical progression, and management of this opportunistic fungal infection
topic Otolaryngology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9733781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36514560
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.31220
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