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Zygomycosis

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Zygomycosis Intro - Fungal Invaders ID

  • Causative Agents: Fungi of the Order Mucorales.
  • Common Genera:
    • Rhizopus (most frequent)
    • Mucor
    • Lichtheimia (prev. Absidia)
    • Rhizomucor
    • Cunninghamella
  • Key Hyphal Features:
    • Broad (5-20 µm), pauciseptate (few septa) or aseptate.
    • Irregular, "ribbon-like" hyphae.
    • Branching often at right angles (approx. 90°).

Rhizopus arrhizus (formerly R. oryzae) is the predominant species causing human zygomycosis, especially rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis (ROCM).

Zygomycosis Patho - Invasion Secrets

  • Entry: Inhalation of sporangiospores into nasal passages/lungs.
  • Key Predisposing Factors:
    • Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA): Acidic, high-glucose; ↑serum iron.
    • Immunosuppression: Neutropenia, corticosteroids, hematologic malignancies.
    • Iron overload: Deferoxamine (acts as siderophore for Rhizopus).
  • Virulence & Invasion:
    • Angioinvasion: Hyphae invade blood vessels, causing thrombosis.
    • Endothelial Adherence: Fungal CotH proteins bind endothelial GRP78.
    • Ketone Reductase: Aids survival in acidic DKA.
    • Rapid Growth & Iron Uptake: Fuels tissue destruction.

Zygomycosis angioinvasion histology

⭐ Hallmark: Angioinvasion by hyphae into blood vessels, leading to thrombosis, infarction, and rapid, extensive tissue necrosis.

Zygomycosis Clinical - Disease Faces

  • Rhinocerebral (most common, ~50%): Acute sinusitis, facial swelling, bloody nasal discharge, headache, proptosis, vision loss. Black necrotic eschar on palate/nasal turbinates is characteristic.

    • Often in DKA, hematological malignancy.
    • Cranial nerve palsies (III, IV, V, VI, VII).
  • Pulmonary (~15-30%): Fever, cough, dyspnea, chest pain, hemoptysis. Angioinvasion leads to infarction, cavitation.

    • Common in neutropenic patients, transplant recipients.
  • Cutaneous (~10-15%): Erythema, induration, necrosis. Can be primary (trauma, burns) or secondary (disseminated).

    • Ecthyma gangrenosum-like lesions.
  • Gastrointestinal (~5-10%): Abdominal pain, distension, nausea, vomiting, GI bleeding, bowel perforation. Rare, high mortality.

  • Disseminated (<5%): Spread to brain, spleen, liver, heart. Poor prognosis.

⭐ Rhinocerebral zygomycosis is the most common form, especially in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) patients, presenting with characteristic black necrotic eschar in the nasal cavity or palate. This is a critical diagnostic clue!

Zygomycosis Dx - Spotting the Culprit

  • Specimens: Nasal/sinus scrapings, sputum, BAL, deep tissue biopsy (crucial).
  • Direct Microscopy (Rapid):
    • 10-20% KOH or Calcofluor white: Broad (6-25µm), pauciseptate/aseptate hyphae.
    • Characteristic: Ribbon-like, irregular, wide-angle (~90°) branching.
  • Histopathology (Biopsy): Gold standard. Shows tissue necrosis & angioinvasion by hyphae.
  • Culture: Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (SDA) without cycloheximide (inhibits Zygomycetes). Rapid growth ("cottony", "lid lifter"). Species ID (e.g., Rhizopus, Mucor).

⭐ Broad, non-septate (or pauciseptate) hyphae with irregular right-angle branching is a hallmark finding on direct microscopy.

Microscopy of Zygomycetes broad aseptate hyphae

Zygomycosis Rx - Fungus Fight Plan

  • Pillars of Management: Rapid diagnosis, aggressive surgical debridement, systemic antifungals, control predisposing conditions.

⭐ Liposomal Amphotericin B is the initial drug of choice; it offers better CNS penetration and reduced nephrotoxicity than conventional AMB.

  • Duration: Until clinical/radiological resolution. Consider maintenance if high risk of recurrence.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Caused by Mucorales order fungi (e.g., Rhizopus, Mucor).
  • Features broad, non-septate or pauciseptate hyphae with characteristic right-angle (approx. 90°) branching.
  • Strongly associated with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), neutropenia, and other immunosuppressive states.
  • Rhinocerebral zygomycosis is the most common form, presenting with black necrotic eschar and potential orbital/CNS invasion.
  • Diagnosis relies on histopathological examination of biopsy specimens showing invasive hyphae; culture can confirm.
  • Management requires urgent surgical debridement of necrotic tissue and systemic Amphotericin B.
  • Angioinvasion leading to thrombosis and tissue necrosis is a key pathological feature of the disease process.

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