Title of article :
Mixed invasive fungal infections among COVID-19 patients
Author/Authors :
Singh ، Vanya Department of Microbiology - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Prasad ، Amber Department of Microbiology - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Panda ، Prasan Kumar Department of Internal Medicine - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Totaganti ، Manjunath Department of Internal Medicine - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Tyagi ، Amit Kumar Department of ENT - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Thaduri ، Abhinav Department of ENT - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Rao ، Shalinee Department of Pathology - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Bairwa ، Mukesh Department of Internal Medicine - All India Institute of Medical Sciences , Singh ، Ashok Kumar Department of Pathology - All India Institute of Medical Sciences
From page :
19
To page :
27
Abstract :
Background and Purpose: The healthcare system in India collapsed during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. A fungal epidemic was announced amid the pandemic with several cases of COVID-associated mucormycosis and pulmonary aspergillosis being reported. However, there is limited data regarding mixed fungal infections in COVID-19 patients. Therefore, we present a series of ten consecutive COVID-19 patients with mixed invasive fungal infections (MIFIs). Materials and Methods: Among COVID-19 patients hospitalized in May 2021 at a tertiary care center in North India, 10 cases of microbiologically confirmed COVID-19-associated mucormycosis-aspergillosis (CAMA) were evaluated. Results: All patients had diabetes and the majority of them were infected with severe COVID-19 pneumonia (6/10, 60%) either on admission or in the past month while two were each of moderate (20%) and mild (20%) categories of COVID-19; and were treated with steroid and cocktail therapy. The patients were managed with amphotericin-B along with surgical intervention. In total, 70% of all CAMA patients (Rhizopus arrhizus with Aspergillus flavus in seven and Aspergillus fumigatus complex in three patients) survived. Conclusion: The study findings reflected the critical importance of a high index of clinical suspicion and accurate microbiological diagnosis in managing invasive dual molds and better understanding of the risk and progression of MIFIs among COVID-19 patients. Careful scrutiny and identification of MIFIs play a key role in the implementation of effective management strategies.
Keywords :
Aspergillosis , Coronavirus disease , invasive fungal disease , Mucormycosis
Journal title :
Current Medical Mycology
Journal title :
Current Medical Mycology
Record number :
2725379
Link To Document :
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