Post Mucormycosis Frontal Bone Osteonecrosis: “A Road Less Traveled During the Pandemic”

Osteonecrosis in mucormycosis is a rare phenomenon and has been reported usually following trauma or in immunocompromised individuals. Osteonecrosis of skull as a complication of mucormycosis is a rare presentation, which makes the study ever so rare and interesting. Within 6 months, a total of 114...

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Veröffentlicht in:World neurosurgery 2023-04, Vol.172, p.e335-e342
Hauptverfasser: Chugh, Ashish, Punia, Prashant, Gotecha, Sarang, Rege, Ishant, Shinde, Vinod
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Osteonecrosis in mucormycosis is a rare phenomenon and has been reported usually following trauma or in immunocompromised individuals. Osteonecrosis of skull as a complication of mucormycosis is a rare presentation, which makes the study ever so rare and interesting. Within 6 months, a total of 114 patients presented with mucormycosis as COVID-19 sequel, 60 of whom underwent form of endoscopic sinus debridement. Six of these 60 patients presented with frontal bone osteonecrosis and were included in the study. All 6 patients presented within a time period of 2–4 months' post FESS. One of the 6 patients succumbed to her illness. Another patient presented with local recurrence after 3 months, for which she underwent resurgery and debridement. The other 4 patients showed gradual recovery and are without symptoms or radiologic progression at 6-month follow-up. Osteonecrosis in mucormycosis is a rare phenomenon, and the 2 entities have rarely been reported together. The disease usually limits itself to the frontal bone only, and pathogenesis for spread is due to a vicious cycle of infection and ischemia. Prompt diagnosis via imaging, aggressive surgical debridement with a good antifungal cover, good patient compliance, and regular follow-up form the mainstay of treatment.
ISSN:1878-8750
1878-8769
1878-8769
DOI:10.1016/j.wneu.2023.01.023