Several thousand coronavirus patients in India have contracted a deadly and aggressive fungal infection, compounding the country's troubles as it reels from the pandemic.
What is the fungus?
Mucormycosis, dubbed "black fungus", is caused by a mould found in soil and in decaying organic matter like rotting leaves, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
People get mucormycosis, of which there are several types, by breathing in the fungal spores. They can be spread in hospitals and homes by air humidifiers or oxygen tanks containing dirty water.
How dangerous is it?
The infection needs to be caught early as it is aggressive and dead tissue has to be scraped away. Surgeons sometimes have to remove patients' nose, eyes or even their jaw to stop it getting to the brain.
The average fatality rate is 54 percent, according to the CDC.
Once infected, people can die within days. However it is not contagious, according to the CDC. India normally deals with a few dozen cases a year.
Generally the body's defences repel the fungus and only those with severely weakened immune systems -- for example organ transplant or cancer patients -- are affected.
Why are coronavirus patients at risk?
With coronavirus and other conditions, a dangerous phenomenon called a "cytokine storm" can occur where the immune system goes into overdrive, damaging organs.
So doctors have been prescribing steroids to reduce the immune response. But both this weakens the body's defences and increases sugar levels, which funguses thrive off.
What other factors are there?
Diabetics -- who also have excessive sugar in their bloodstream -- are also at higher risk. India has high rates of diabetes.
Some hospitals and doctors have been over-prescribing steroids, and some people have been taking them at home without medical advice.
"People have started using (steroids) liberally, excessively and inappropriately," Professor K. Srinath Reddy, from the Public Health Foundation of India, told AFP.
How many infections are there
There are at least 7,250 cases in India, according to the Hindustan Times, which cited a government court submission.
Maharashtra state has now reported more than 2,000 cases. Gujarat, home state of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has about 1,200, officials said.
At least nine states have now declared the infection an epidemic. Several cities have opened special hospital wards.
Authorities have not said how many people have died nationally from black fungus. According to the Hindustan Times, at least 219 people -- likely an underestimate -- have died.
What about treatment drugs ?
There are severe shortages of the main anti-fungal drug to treat the infection, amphotericin B.
The government and drug companies in the country once dubbed the "pharmacy of the world" are scrambling to ramp up production.
Amulya Nidhi, a health activist, said the government had earlier failed to prepare an adequate supply of coronavirus medicines such as remdesivir and plasma.
With black fungus, it has repeated the same mistake.
"The government should have acted when it found out about the very first (fungus) case... People are not supposed to be begging for life-saving medicines."
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
US Lawmakers Back Covid Chinese Lab Leak Theory After Two-Year Probe New XEC Covid Variant Spreads To 27 Countries, Here's What We Know So Far Study Shows How Long Covid Is Debilitating Children's Health "Congress Should Be Ready...": Mani Shankar Aiyar's Big INDIA Bloc Remark 3 Marriages, Rs 1.25 Crore: How 'Looting Bride' Targeted Rich Men Bashar Al-Assad's Wife Files For Divorce, Wants To Return To UK: Report Constipation Awareness Month 2024: Diet Tips For Better Digestion Ukraine Collects Vast War Data Trove To Train AI Models Manual Labour Resumes Excavation Work Of Sambhal Stepwell After JCB Fails Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.