Saksenaea erythrospora infection after medical tourism for esthetic breast augmentation surgery

•This is the first reported case of mucormycosis following esthetic surgery and was associated with medical tourism.•Mucormycosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of necrotizing infections of the skin and soft tissue that evolve rapidly after cosmetic surgery performed in tropical...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of infectious diseases 2016-08, Vol.49 (C), p.107-110
Hauptverfasser: Rodríguez, José Y., Rodríguez, Gerson J., Morales-López, Soraya E., Cantillo, Carlos E., Le Pape, Patrice, Álvarez-Moreno, Carlos A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•This is the first reported case of mucormycosis following esthetic surgery and was associated with medical tourism.•Mucormycosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of necrotizing infections of the skin and soft tissue that evolve rapidly after cosmetic surgery performed in tropical or subtropical countries.•Elective cosmetic procedures are the most common medical tourism surgeries, and the most frequent complication is infection of the surgical site. Mucormycosis caused by Saksenaea erythrospora is rarely reported in humans. Three previous cases have been reported in the literature, two associated with trauma (a sailing accident in Argentina and a combat trauma in Iraq) and one as a cause of invasive rhinosinusitis (India), all in immunocompetent patients . The first case of mucormycosis following esthetic surgery, associated with medical tourism, is reported herein. A case study of an S. erythrospora infection in an immunocompetent woman after the completion of esthetic surgery (dermolipectomy and breast augmentation) is reported. The infection presented as a rapidly progressive necrotizing infection of the skin and soft tissue, which required a bilateral mastectomy and extensive surgical debridement associated with prolonged antifungal therapy. The organism was identified phenotypically and confirmed biologically after rDNA amplification and sequencing. Two months later, the patient remains hospitalized awaiting the start of reconstructive surgeries. The present case is, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, the first report from Colombia. Mucormycosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of necrotizing infections of the skin and soft tissue that evolve rapidly after cosmetic surgery performed in tropical or subtropical countries.
ISSN:1201-9712
1878-3511
DOI:10.1016/j.ijid.2016.05.032