- at
other sites,
although less
commonly affected.
Sinuses and
brain (
rhinocerebral); most
common in
people with
poorly controlled diabetes and in people...
- can also be an
opportunistic pathogen known to
cause pulmonary, CNS,
rhinocerebral, or
cutaneous infections in
animals and
humans with
impaired immunity...
-
transplant patients, who are at high risk for
fatal invasive mycoses.
Rhinocerebral infection is
characterized by
paranasal swelling with
necrotic tissues...
-
sensorineural hearing loss;
Intracranial abscess; Mucormycosis,
especially rhinocerebral disease in the
setting of
diabetes mellitus;
Necrotizing soft tissue...
- itraconazole, and fluconazole. The
majority of the
cases of
infection are
rhinocerebral infections. At the same time, it has been
found in
literature that R...
- wide
range of
infections being described;
including rhinal, cutaneous,
rhinocerebral, pulmonary, renal, and
disseminated infections. However,
there have...
-
thrombosis and infarction.
Common classes of
mucormycoses include pulmonary,
rhinocerebral (particularly when
invasion into the
vasculature of the
brain is involved)...
- The
American Journal of Rhinology. "Iontop****sis Treatment" (1979) "
Rhinocerebral Mucormycosis Presenting As An
Orbital Apex Syndrome: Case Report" (1982...
-
extend from the
sinuses into the
orbit and the
cranial vault,
leading to
rhinocerebral mucormycosis.[citation needed] The best
known species of Lagenidium...
-
Trisomy 18 Syndrome" (1970, with
Isamu Sando and
Raymond P. Wood II) "
Rhinocerebral and
Otologic Mucormycosis" (1970, with
William G.
Hemenway and Roger...