Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine (Apr 2022)

Jalaneti as primary intervention in suspected rhino-orbito-cerebral mucormycosis helps improving the recovery: A case report

  • Sanjeev Rastogi,
  • Ankita Verma

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 100516

Abstract

Read online

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in several opportunistic infections like mucormycosis (MCR) to surface. Although this is commonly afflicting immunocompromised people managed through prolonged ICU care, epidemiological observations suggest that it is also associated with conditions like uncontrolled diabetes. Due to its invasive nature and systemic reach, MCR has high mortality warranting an early diagnosis and treatment. We present here a case of a non-COVID, diabetic patient having acute onset paranasal and periorbital swelling with headache suspected for rhino-orbito-cerebral MCR. The case was innovatively dealt with jalaneti (saline nasal irrigation) seeing a delay in the institution of definitive anti-fungal therapy. Six sittings of jalaneti in four days had been able to give near complete symptomatic relief in paranasal swelling and headache even before the endoscopic nasal debridement and anti-fungal therapy was initiated.Seeing the urgency of diagnosis and treatment in any suspected case of MCR, a simple and self-administrable procedure like jalaneti seems to have a high value for its possible role in reducing the sinus inflammation and reducing the disease intensity in order to find more time for the proper diagnosis and treatment initiation. Negligible cost of jalaneti, its easy administration, and minimal adversity potential are additional advantages for proposing jalaneti as a possible prophylaxis in MCR. More serious clinical research is urgently required to confirm the observations made in this single case report and to extend its benefits to the people suffering with MCR.

Keywords