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India’s health officials warned the country’s doctors to be on the lookout for mucormycosis, or so-called “black fungus” infections among coronavirus patients, particularly those with diabetes. The infection, which could be fatal, may cause black discoloration of the nose, facial pain, cytotec to induce miscarriage numbing or swelling, fever, chest pain or other issues.  

The infection, which is caused by a group of molds that live in the environment, most commonly affects the sinuses or lungs after inhaling fungal spores, but can also occur on the skin after a cut, burn or other injuries, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Those most at-risk for the rare infection are patients with diabetes, cancer, transplant recipients, those patients with low white blood cell counts, those with long-term corticosteroid use, a history of injection drug use, patients with high iron, and premature or low birthweight babies.

CORONAVIRUS CAN SPREAD MORE THAN 6 FEET IN CERTAIN CONDITIONS, CDC WARNS

The infection cannot be spread between patients or animals.

 “There have been cases reported in several other countries – including the U.K., U.S., France, Austria, Brazil and Mexico, but the volume is much bigger in India,” David Denning, a professor at Britain’s Manchester University and an expert at the Global Action Fund for Fungal Infections, told Reuters. “And one of the reasons is lots and lots of diabetes and lots or poorly controlled diabetes.”

May 6, 2021: A health worker tries to adjust the oxygen mask of a patient at the BKC jumbo field hospital, one of the largest COVID-19 facilities in Mumbai, India.
(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Serious cases require surgery, including eye removal depending on where the infected tissue occurs. Antifungal medicine can also be given via IV or by mouth.

WHO ELEVATES INDIAN CORONAVIRUS STRAIN TO ‘VARIANT OF CONCERN’

“Previously if I saw one patient a year, I now see about one a week,” Nishant Kumar, a consultant ophthalmologist at Hinduja hospital in Mumbai, told Reuters.

Akshay Nair, a Mumbai-based eye surgeon, told BBC News that in the month of April he had already seen 40 patients across three hospitals suffering from the infection. He told the news outlet that many of the patients had diabetes and a history of coronavirus infection.

For now, the Indian Council of Medical Research has advised doctors to monitor blood glucose levels post COVID-19 discharge and in diabetics, and to “use steroid judiciously – correct timing, correct dose and duration,” in a bid to cut down on occurrences.

 

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