Antibody-based therapy is several steps closer to treat lethal mucormycosis

Mucormycosis, a fungal infection caused by Mucorales, has high mortality rates in people with weakened immune systems and those suffering from severe trauma like burns, blast injuries or victims of natural disasters. The disease caused serious infection among COVID-19 patients treated with high doses of corticosteroids with mortality rates close to 60 percent. In the United States, there are approximately 4,000 cases per year with a rate of 200,000 in Southeast Asia where the disease is endemic to India. While vaccines and immunotherapies are available for viruses and bacteria, effective antifungal immunotherapies for mucormycosis, specifically, are lacking.

Congrats To Chris From Arizona!
- Ultimate Guide to YouTube Multiview: Everything You Need to Know - seo
- The Democrats Have Found Their Savior!
- ‘Anything Works in a Bull Market.’ But What About a Bear Market?
- NCI employees can’t publish information on these topics without special approval - Annie Waldman and Lisa Song, ProPublica
- Natural gas prices may predict when a Russia-Ukraine peace deal is near - Diana Zapata
- Anthropic appears to be using Brave to power web search for its Claude chatbot - Kyle Wiggers

Is This The Most Powerful Smartphone at 24,999? ft. iQOO Neo 10R
- Thursday is Free Cone Day at Dairy Queen
- Believe It Or Not, Dems Are Actually Angry Trump Arrested A Criminal Illegal Immigrant With Long Rap Sheet - Jason Hopkins
- Week in Review: Google buys Wiz - Karyne Levy
- No Sci-Fi Romance Tops Award-Winning '80s Classic - Jonathan Klotz
- Epic Historic Sequel On Paramount+ Is Over The Top And Totally Worth It - Robert Scucci
- Saturn's rings to 'disappear' in rare astronomical event visible this weekend