The first report of rhinosinusitis by Rhizopus delemar in a patient with severe COVID-19 in Iran: a case report.

Publication date: Nov 05, 2024

Mucormycosis is a severe and fatal fungal infection in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 caused by Mucorales. Here we present a case of a 63-year-old man with coronavirus disease 2019 infection, along with rhinosinusitis mucormycosis caused by Rhizopus delemar. A 63-year-old Iranian man suffering from a coronavirus disease 2019 infection with symptoms of cough, shortness of breath, and generalized body pain. On the basis of the clinical manifestations, such as headache, a history of black nasal discharge, nasal hypoesthesia, facial swelling, numbness, nasal obstruction, presence of necrotic lesions on the nasal passages on physical examination, and abnormal computed tomography scans of paranasal sinuses, the patient underwent surgical debridement. Direct microscopy of specimens obtained from the paranasal sinuses, and subsequent isolation and identification, revealed a rhinosinusitis mucormycosis caused by R. delemar. Despite therapeutic measures, such as sinus debridement surgery and antifungal therapy with amphotericin B injection (50 mg/day), the patient died after 35 days of hospitalization. In this report, we present the first documented case of human infection with R. delemar in a patient with coronavirus disease 2019 infection, who also exhibited rhinosinusitis mucormycosis. R. delemar appears to be an emerging agent of rhinosinusitis mucormycosis in this region. Furthermore, prompt diagnosis and the exploration of alternative antifungal treatments, beyond amphotericin B, may be crucial for effectively managing patients with R. delemar infections.

Concepts Keywords
Coronavirus COVID-19
Iran Infection
Old Mucormycosis
Rhinosinusitis Rhinosinusitis
Tomography Rhizopus delemar

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH rhinosinusitis
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH Mucormycosis
disease MESH fungal infection
disease MESH infection
disease MESH shortness of breath
disease IDO history
disease MESH hypoesthesia
disease MESH nasal obstruction
drug DRUGBANK Amphotericin B

Original Article

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