Background: Mucormycosis is a rare and opportunistic infection usually associated with hematologic diseases, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, solid tumors, and organ transplantation.

Methods: We present five cases of mucor infection after transplantation (three after a series of 750 orthotopic liver transplantation and two after a series of 13 simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation in patients with type 1 diabetes) subjected to medical and surgical treatment and analyze the factors related to the development of this infection.

Results: The clinical forms were two cutaneous (laparotomy wound or prior surgical drain site), two rhino-maxillary, and one pulmonary. As risk factors for mucormycosis all patients had pre- or posttransplantation diabetes, and showed at least one episode of acute rejection that required aggressive immunosuppression (2-7 g of methylprednisolone; also three patients were treated with antithymocyte globulin [ATG] monoclonal antibody [orthoclone and/or OKT3]). We also found renal failure, acidosis, malnutrition, and Candida and cytomegalovirus infections as factors related to mucor infection. Diagnosis of fungal infection was confirmed by exudate or fluid culture in three cases and by biopsy in two. All patients were treated with liposomal amphotericin B (from 3.5 to 5.6 g of total dose) and resection until the surgical margins were free of infection. All patients survived after this severe infection.

Conclusions: With an early diagnosis of mucormycosis by clinical findings, culture, or tissue biopsy, and aggressive treatment consisting of administration of liposomal amphotericin B and surgical resection of all infected tissue, excellent results are achieved.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007890-200202150-00026DOI Listing

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  • A 60-year-old male with diabetes developed a rare co-infection of pulmonary aspergillosis and mucormycosis, leading to severe health complications.
  • The patient initially struggled with fever and worsening conditions despite surgery and antifungal treatments.
  • Successful treatment involved bronchoscopic infusion of amphotericin B, resulting in quick recovery and resolution of lung issues.
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