IPLab:Lab 10:Mucormycosis
Contents
Clinical SummaryEdit
This 63-year-old white male was in his usual state of good health until eight weeks before his death when he developed sudden onset of shortness of breath. A thoracotomy was performed for plication of ruptured emphysematous blebs. Following improvement and discharge from the hospital he developed weakness, lethargy, and a left lower lobe lung infiltrate. The patient's condition soon deteriorated further, with almost every organ system having failed. The patient developed DIC and peripheral embolic phenomena, including gangrene of his extremities and face. A single antemortem blood culture grew Staphylococcus aureus.
ImagesEdit
This is an even higher-power photomicrograph of the wall of the carotid artery (1) and the thrombus (2). Within the wall of the artery and in the thrombus there are multiple variably shaped clear areas (3). At this magnification and with this stain, it is impossible to determine what these clear spaces represent.
Virtual MicroscopyEdit
Study QuestionsEdit
Additional ResourcesEdit
ReferenceEdit
Journal ArticlesEdit
- Marcó del Pont J, De Cicco L, Gallo G, Llera J, De Santibanez E, D'agostino D. Hepatic arterial thrombosis due to Mucor species in a child following orthotopic liver transplantation. Transpl Infect Dis 2000 Mar;2(1):33-5.
ImagesEdit
Related IPLab CasesEdit
Shortness of breath is a common clinical manifestation of heart failure.
A thoracotomy is a surgical procedure in which an opening is made in the chest wall.
An infiltrate is an accumulation of cells in the lung parenchyma--this is a sign of pneumonia.
Mural thrombosis is the formation of multiple thrombi along an injured endocardial wall.
A thrombus is a solid mass resulting from the aggregation of blood constituents within the vascular system.