Abstrakt: |
The objective of this paper is to review a recent case of rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis that involved the successful treatment of an immunocompromised male patient that took place in a deployed military setting. In this interventional case review, a comprehensive evaluation of predisposing factors, presenting signs and symptoms, diagnostic evaluation, and treatment will be discussed in detail. The patient was a 38-yr-old noncompliant insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus Iraqi man whose initial presentation encompassed nonspecific signs and symptoms consistent with sinusitis. Symptoms progressed rapidly including the development of acute visual loss, unilateral facial edema, fixed dilated right pupil, loss of extraocular movements, and oropharyngeal eschar formation. With this progressive clinical picture, a diagnosis of mucormycosis was made in the absence of histological confirmation due to the nature of the deployed environment. Treatment included hospitalization for combined intervention with intravenous antifungal therapy and a series of surgeries which ultimately resulted in orbital exenteration and preservation of life. Successful treatment was attributed to having a high index of suspicion in the clinical presentation of nonspecific otorhinolaryngological and ophthalmological symptoms superimposed with underlying predisposing immunocompromised host conditions. |