“…Affected individuals at the early stages can present with fever, acute sinusitis, nasal congestion, purulent nasal discharge, and headache [14]. If not diagnosed and treated early, mucormycosis easily spreads to the brain by either direct extension through the cribriform plate, infratemporal fossa, inferior orbital fissure, and walls of the sinuses or the invasion of the arteries and veins with resultant vascular thrombosis and infarction [11,14,20,21]. The symptoms of intracranial infection include diplopia, ophthalmoplegia, acute vision loss, cranial nerve deficits, focal neurological deficits, and altered sensorium [11].…”