therapeutic action: Amphotericin B (antifungal)

Detection and diagnostic process of liver abscess secondary to chemotherapy by mucor indicus in a patient with acute leukemic disease: case report

A 60-year-old man with acute leukemia developed a serious fungal infection in his liver caused by Mucor indicus after receiving chemotherapy that weakened his immune system. Doctors identified the infection through tissue samples and genetic testing, then treated him successfully with antifungal medications amphotericin B and posaconazole. This case highlights the importance of early detection and proper diagnosis of rare fungal infections in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.

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A human-relevant alternative infection model for mucormycosis using the silkworm Bombyx mori

Scientists developed a new way to test antifungal drugs using silkworms instead of expensive and ethically problematic mammal studies. They infected silkworms with mucormycosis-causing fungi and found that the infections behaved similarly to human cases, especially when they simulated human risk factors like steroid use and iron overload. The silkworm model successfully demonstrated that existing antifungal drugs work, while also revealing differences in fungal virulence that were linked to specific surface proteins.

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