An 11-year-old immunocompetent girl presented with two and a half months of progressive right orbital cellulitis, which did not respond to multiple courses of antibiotics or prednisone. A panfungal polymerase chain reaction primer was positive for Saksenaea vasiformis, and she completed 5 months of oral posaconazole therapy after debridement. Saksenaea vasiformis is a rare cause of zygomycosis, and it typically causes skin and soft tissue infection in immunocompetent hosts, particularly after a traumatic injury. The diagnosis should be considered in cases with a protracted course that fail to respond to typical antibiotic therapy. Treatment includes surgical debridement, in additional to antifungal therapy with amphotericin B or posaconazole.
CITATION STYLE
Reich, P., Shute, T., Lysen, C., Lockhart, S. R., Kelly Keating, M., Custer, P., & Orscheln, R. (2018). Saksenaea vasiformis Orbital Cellulitis in an Immunocompetent Child Treated with Posaconazole. Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, 7(3), E169–E171. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpids/piy021
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