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Invasive Aspergillosis of the Stomach and Co-infection With Candida krusei in a Patient With Terminal Liver Failure: A Case Report.

Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is diagnosed almost exclusively in immunocompromised patients. It is located mainly in the lungs or paranasal sinuses, but occasionally other organs and the gastrointestinal tract may also be affected either alone or as a part of a disseminated disease. The main risk factors predisposing to IA are neutropenia, immunosuppressive and steroid therapy, as well as severe underlying disease. Despite progress in diagnostics and therapy of IA, it is still characterized by a high mortality rate. In the disseminated aspergillosis of the gastrointestinal tract, mainly the small or large intestine are affected, rarely the upper gastrointestinal tract. To our best knowledge only a very few cases of IA of the gastric wall have been reported so far in the literature. We describe a unique case of this very rare location of IA in the stomach in a patient who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation in the course of active IA and Candida krusei infection of the stomach wall. The patient's condition improved on combination therapy of voriconazole and caspofungin.

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