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Saksenaea mucormycosis: a rare and dangerous cause of necrotising fasciitis

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Necrotising fasciitis is a rapidly progressing soft tissue infection requiring early and adequate surgical debridement and appropriate antibiotic cover. The present case highlights bacterial fasciitis associated with fungal (Mucor) infection… Click to show full abstract

Necrotising fasciitis is a rapidly progressing soft tissue infection requiring early and adequate surgical debridement and appropriate antibiotic cover. The present case highlights bacterial fasciitis associated with fungal (Mucor) infection with insidious angioinvasive nature (Saksenaea vasiformis) which required amputation, negative-pressure vacuum dressings and amphotericin B for definitive treatment. This demonstrates a relatively rare case of the group IV classification of necrotising fasciitis, which we must consider when there is slowly progressing tissue death despite seemingly adequate treatment.

Keywords: fasciitis; mucormycosis rare; saksenaea mucormycosis; dangerous cause; rare dangerous; necrotising fasciitis

Journal Title: BMJ Case Reports
Year Published: 2023

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