Abstract

Burn patients are particularly susceptible to atypical and opportunistic infections. Here we report an unusual case of a 40-year-old previously healthy man with a 74% TBSA burn injury who developed a presumed Fusarium brain abscess. This patient had a complicated infectious course including ESBL E. coli and Elizabethkingia bacteremia and pneumonia, MRSA ventilator-associated pneumonia, Mycobacterium abscessus bacteremia, and Fusarium fungemia. After diagnosis with a fungal abscess on magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, the patient was treated with aspiration and appropriate antifungal therapies. The patient was eventually transitioned to comfort care and died on hospital day 167. This is the first published report of a Fusarium-related brain abscess since it was first reported in a case report of a burned child in 1974.

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