Mucormycosis

Mucormycosis
Classification and external resources
Specialty infectious disease
ICD-10 B46.0-B46.5
ICD-9-CM 117.7
DiseasesDB 31759
MedlinePlus 000649
Patient UK Mucormycosis
MeSH D009091

Mucormycosis is any fungal infection caused by fungi in the order Mucorales.[1]:328 Generally, species in the Mucor, Rhizopus, Absidia, and Cunninghamella genera are most often implicated.[2][3] This disease is often characterized by hyphae growing in and around blood vessels.

"Mucormycosis" and "zygomycosis" are sometimes used interchangeably.[4] However, zygomycota has been identified as polyphyletic, and is not included in modern fungal classification systems.

Also, while zygomycosis includes Entomophthorales, mucormycosis excludes this group.

Signs and symptoms

A 47-year-old man with mucormycosis and electron micrograph of his skin showing sporangia of Mucorales fungi.[5]

Mucormycosis frequently infects the sinuses, brain, or lungs. While infection of the oral cavity or brain are the most common forms of mucormycosis, the fungus can also infect other areas of the body such as the gastrointestinal tract, skin, and other organ systems.[6] In rare cases, the maxilla may be affected by mucormycosis.[7] The rich blood vessel supply of maxillofacial areas usually prevents fungal infections, although more virulent fungi, such as those responsible for mucormycosis, can often overcome this difficulty.[7]

There are several key signs which point towards mucormycosis. One such sign is fungal invasion into the blood vessels which results in the formation of blood clots and surrounding tissue death due to a loss of blood supply.[8] If the disease involves the brain, then symptoms may include a one-sided headache behind the eyes, facial pain, fevers, nasal congestion that progresses to black discharge, and acute sinusitis along with eye swelling.[9] Affected skin may appear relatively normal during the earliest stages of infection. This skin quickly becomes reddened and may be swollen before eventually turning black due to tissue death.[8] Other forms of mucormycosis may involve the lungs, skin, or be widespread throughout the body; symptoms may also include difficulty breathing, and persistent cough. In cases of tissue death, symptoms include nausea and vomiting, coughing up blood, and abdominal pain.[6][9]

Diagnosis

As swabs of tissue or discharge are generally unreliable, the diagnosis of mucormycosis tends to be established with a biopsy specimen of the involved tissue.

Treatment

If mucormycosis is suspected, amphotericin B therapy should be immediately administered due to the rapid spread and high mortality rate of the disease. Amphotericin B is usually administered for an additional 4–6 weeks after initial therapy begins to ensure eradication of the infection. Posaconazole has been shown to be effective against mucormycosis, perhaps more so than amphotericin B, but has not yet replaced it as the standard of care.

After administration of either amphotericin B or posaconazole, surgical removal of the "fungus ball" is indicated. The disease must be monitored carefully for any signs of reemergence.[6][10]

Surgical therapy can be very drastic, and in some cases of disease involving the nasal cavity and the brain, removal of infected brain tissue may be required. In some cases surgery may be disfiguring because it may involve removal of the palate, nasal cavity, or eye structures.[9] Surgery may be extended to more than one operation.[6] It has been hypothesized that hyperbaric oxygen may be beneficial as an adjunctive therapy because higher oxygen pressure increases the ability of neutrophils to kill the organism.[8]

Prognosis

In most cases, the prognosis of mucormycosis is poor and has varied mortality rates depending on its form and severity. In the rhinocerebral form, the mortality rate is between 30% and 70%, whereas disseminated mucormycosis presents with the highest mortality rate in an otherwise healthy patient, with a mortality rate of up to 90%.[8] Patients with AIDS have a mortality rate of almost 100%.[10] Possible complications of mucormycosis include the partial loss of neurological function, blindness and clotting of brain or lung vessels.[9]

Epidemiology

Mucormycosis is a very rare infection, and as such it is hard to note histories of patients and incidence of the infection.[6] However, one American oncology center revealed that mucormycosis was found in 0.7% of autopsies and roughly 20 patients per every 100,000 admissions to that center.[10] In the United States, mucormycosis was most commonly found in rhinocerebral form, almost always with hyperglycemia and metabolic acidosis (e.g. DKA).[11] In most cases the patient is immunocompromised, although rare cases have occurred in which the subject was not; these are usually due to a traumatic inoculation of fungal spores. Internationally, mucormycosis was found in 1% of patients with acute leukemia in an Italian review.[6]

Risk factors

Predisposing factors for mucormycosis include HIV/AIDS, diabetes mellitus, cancers such as lymphomas, kidney failure, organ transplant, long term corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapy, cirrhosis energy malnutrition,[6][7] and deferoxamine therapy. Despite this, however, there have been cases of mucormycosis reported with no apparent predisposing factors present.[11]

Outbreaks

Not every hospital in the USA are required to publicize details of infectious outbreaks which occur within their facilities. In 2014, details of a lethal mucormycosis outbreak[12] which occurred in 2008 emerged after television and newspaper reports responded to an article in a pediatric medical journal.[13] Contaminated hospital linen was found to be spreading the infection.

A cluster of infections occurred in the wake of the 2011 Joplin tornado. As of July 19, a total of 18 suspected cases of cutaneous mucormycosis had been identified, of which 13 were confirmed. A confirmed case was defined as 1) necrotizing soft-tissue infection requiring antifungal treatment or surgical debridement in a person injured in the tornado, 2) with illness onset on or after May 22 and 3) positive fungal culture or histopathology and genetic sequencing consistent with a Mucormycete. No additional cases related to that outbreak have been reported since June 17. Ten patients required admission to an intensive-care unit, and five died.[14]

Cutaneous mucormycosis has been reported after previous natural disasters; however, this is the first known cluster occurring after a tornado. None of the infections were found in persons cleaning up debris; instead it is believed transmission occurred through penetrating injuries inflicted by contaminated objects (e.g. splinters from a woodpile). Health-care providers should consider environmental fungi as potential causes of necrotizing soft-tissue infections in patients injured during tornadoes and initiate early treatment for suspected infections.[15]

Notable people affected

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References

  1. James, William D.; Berger, Timothy G.; et al. (2006). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: clinical Dermatology. Saunders Elsevier. ISBN 0-7216-2921-0.
  2. Rinaldi M.G. (1989). "Zygomycosis". Infect Dis Clin North Am. 3: 19–41.
  3. Lee F.Y.; Mossad S.B.; Adal K.A. (1999). "Pulmonary mucormycosis: the last 30 years". Arch Intern Med. 159 (12): 1301–9. doi:10.1001/archinte.159.12.1301. PMID 10386506.
  4. Staff Springfield News-Leader (June 10, 2011) "Aggressive fungus strikes Joplin tornado victims" Seattle PI, Hearst Communications Inc.
  5. Ran Yuping (2016). "Observation of Fungi, Bacteria, and Parasites in Clinical Skin Samples Using Scanning Electron Microscopy". In Janecek, Milos; Kral, Robert. Modern Electron Microscopy in Physical and Life Sciences. InTech. doi:10.5772/61850. ISBN 978-953-51-2252-4.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Nancy F Crum-Cianflone; MD MPH. "Mucormycosis". eMedicine. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  7. 1 2 3 Auluck A (2007). "Maxillary necrosis by mucormycosis. a case report and literature review" (PDF). Med Oral Patol Oral Cir Bucal. 12 (5): E360–4. PMID 17767099. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Spellberg B, Edwards J, Ibrahim A (2005). "Novel perspectives on mucormycosis: pathophysiology, presentation, and management". Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 18 (3): 556–69. doi:10.1128/CMR.18.3.556-569.2005. PMC 1195964Freely accessible. PMID 16020690.
  9. 1 2 3 4 "MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Mucormycosis". Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  10. 1 2 3 Rebecca J. Frey. "Mucormycosis". Health A to Z. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  11. 1 2 Roden MM, Zaoutis TE, Buchanan WL, et al. (September 2005). "Epidemiology and outcome of Mucormycosis: a review of 929 reported cases". Clin. Infect. Dis. 41 (5): 634–53. doi:10.1086/432579. PMID 16080086.
  12. Catalanello, Rebecca (April 16, 2014). "Mother believes her newborn was the first to die from fungus at Children's Hospital in 2008". NOLA.com.
  13. "5 Children's Hospital patients died in 2008, 2009 after contact with deadly fungus". We acknowledge that Children's Hospital is Hospital A in an upcoming article in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. The safety and well-being of our patients are our top priorities, so as soon as a problem was suspected, the State Health Department and CDC were notified and invited to assist in the investigation. The hospital was extremely aggressive in trying to isolate and then eliminate the source of the fungus.
  14. Williams, Timothy (June 10, 2011) Rare Infection Strikes Victims of a Tornado in Missouri. New York Times.
  15. Fanfair, Robyn Neblett; et al. (July 29, 2011). "Notes from the Field: Fatal Fungal Soft-Tissue Infections After a Tornado – Joplin, Missouri, 2011". MMWR Weekly. 60 (29): 992.
  16. Neblett Fanfair, Robyn; Benedict, Kaitlin; Bos, John; Bennett, Sarah D.; Lo, Yi-Chun; Adebanjo, Tolu; Etienne, Kizee; Deak, Eszter; Derado, Gordana; Shieh, Wun-Ju; Drew, Clifton; Zaki, Sherif; Sugerman, David; Gade, Lalitha; Thompson, Elizabeth H.; Sutton, Deanna A.; Engelthaler, David M.; Schupp, James M.; Brandt, Mary E.; Harris, Julie R.; Lockhart, Shawn R.; Turabelidze, George; Park, Benjamin J. (2012). "Necrotizing Cutaneous Mucormycosis after a Tornado in Joplin, Missouri, in 2011". New England Journal of Medicine. 367 (23): 2214. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1204781. PMID 23215557.
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