Morgellons Disease

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Anasazi23

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Anyone seen a case of this? People seem to be torn as to whether it's an infectious disease process, Munchausen's, or both.

Apparently, it presents often with neuropsychiatric comorbidities.

http://www.morgellons.org/index.html

http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=2283503&page=1

The 'fibers' look very much like typical parasitic organisms.

20060723HO_Morgellons_A_450.jpg

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We had a woman on our inpt unit who swore she had this! She wasn't my pt, so I don't know the whole story, but I do know our ID docs wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole--they truly believe it's complete crap. Delusional Disorder, somatic type (delusional parasitosis) writ large??

Locally there's a former A's baseball player who reports his whole family is infected.

CDC Probes Bizarre Morgellons Condition
By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

Tuesday, August 8, 2006

(08-08) 17:15 PDT ATLANTA (AP) --


Imagine your body pocked by erupting sores. The sensation of little bugs crawling all over you. And worst of all, mysterious red and blue fibers sprouting from your skin.


It may sound like a macabre science fiction movie, but a growing legion of Americans say they suffer from this condition. And now the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is investigating.


Some doctors dismiss these patients as delusional. But the condition — called Morgellons — has caused a small frenzy on the Internet, with hundreds of people pleading for help.


"Sometimes the government doesn't want to panic people until they can figure out a definitive cause," said Pat Boddie, a 62-year-old Alabama woman who said she's had Morgellons for 14 years.


"They're trying to figure out if this is going to be an epidemic. I hate to tell them, but it already is," she said.


The CDC has been receiving as many as 20 calls a day from self-diagnosed Morgellons patients. The agency has been urged to investigate by, among others, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California.


"We're going into this with an open mind," said Dan Rutz, spokesman for a CDC Morgellons task force that began meeting in June.


But so far there is no evidence of an infectious agent, and health officials say there is not yet enough evidence even to call it a disease.


People claiming to have Morgellons report a wide variety of symptoms, ranging from joint pain to irregular bowel movements. But most describe crawling sensations along the skin, sores, fatigue, "brain fog," and the appearance of small or microscopic fibers on or under the skin.


Some say they've suffered for decades, but the syndrome did not get a name until 2002, when the name "Morgellons" (pronounced mor-GELL-uns) was chosen by Mary Leitao. The South Carolina woman, who said her son suffers from the condition, founded the Morgellons Research Foundation.


She found the name in a 1674 medical paper that described a condition called Morgellons, with symptoms somewhat like her son's. So she began using the name. "I never expected it to stick," she said.


Leitao's organization has become a leading source of information and research advocacy, but it too has become controversial.


Last week, at least three of the eight members of the organization resigned over disagreements with Leitao, the executive director, about how she's been running the foundation. One member — the board's chairman — sent a letter to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service, saying Leitao had failed to produce requested financial records and he voiced suspicions of financial impropriety.


Another board member who resigned, Dr. Greg Smith, a Gainesville, Ga., pediatrician, had recently posted a donations-soliciting letter for the foundation on an Internet site frequented by Morgellons patients. Last week, he posted a retraction.


"I cannot in good faith ask anyone to contribute to the foundation," Smith wrote.


Leitao described the controversy as "a power struggle" and said she's done nothing illegal.


Also resigning from the organization was Randy Wymore, an Oklahoma State University assistant professor of pharmacology. He was the organization's director of research.


Wymore had initiated the relationship last year. But because of the in-fighting he said he decided to distance himself. "The research I'm doing is not affected by this," Wymore added.


Until the CDC task force, Wymore was seen as the most reputable scientist to research Morgellons, although he was trained in molecular biology, not clinical disease or fibrous materials.


He recruited two Oklahoma State faculty physicians. They tweezed fibers from beneath the skin of some Morgellons patients who visited the Oklahoma State Center for Health Sciences in Tulsa in February, Wymore said, and sent those samples to the Tulsa Police Department's forensic laboratory.


The police checked the samples against carpet and clothing fibers and other materials, and conducted chemical analyses and other tests. Nothing matched, said Mark Boese, the police lab's director.


"How it is being produced, I don't know," Boese said. He theorized the fibers could be produced by human hair follicles that somehow encapsulated pollutants processed by the body.


Some doctors believe Morgellons is produced by the mind, not the body.


"I think of Morgellons as a piece of a larger phenomenon — delusional parasitosis," said Dr. Annette Matthews, a psychiatrist at the Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.


Delusional parasitosis is a psychosis in which sufferers believe they are infected with parasites. Often the patients have a real-life problem with scabies, lice, or some other tiny attackers, but then imagine they are continuing to plague them, Matthews said.


Asked about reports of multiple Morgellons cases within a family, Matthews said delusions are transmissible — the psychiatric term is 'folie a deux,' for instances in which people come to share a delusion.


Some people will biopsy themselves, or seek large quantities of antibiotics, herbal remedies, industrial bug killers and other expensive and potentially harmful treatments, she said.


The CDC's Rutz said there may be several subgroups among the people who identify themselves as Morgellons sufferers. One group may have delusional parasitosis, but another may have something else.


The 12-person CDC task force includes two pathologists, a toxicologist, an ethicist, a mental health expert and specialists in infectious, parasitic, environmental and chronic disease. The group is developing a case definition of Morgellons.


It's impossible to say how many people have Morgellons without a commonly accepted way to define it. The Morgellons Research Foundation believes the number is at least 5,500, based on the number of families registered with the organization's Web site.


Hopefully, a CDC case definition will lead some physicians to stop treating Morgellons patients like they're crazy, said Smith, the Georgia pediatrician and a Morgellons sufferer.


"A lot of physicians think that if it's not in the textbooks, it's not real," said Smith, who said a fiber once slid across his eyeball and then burrowed in.


Verna Gallagher, 48, said she's been seeing a dermatologist for nearly a year. "(But) he doesn't believe in Morgellons. He said 'That's not a real thing,'" said Gallagher, of Roseville, Calif., near Sacramento.


But while her doctor dismisses the fibers as lint, Gallagher says he is concerned that she may become suicidal. "I cry, and he says I have to live my life" and tells here to write down things that she likes to do.


Meanwhile, she says she is plagued by tiny dark specks and fibers that infest her house. She's paid for exterminators, taken antidepressants, bathed in Borax and spent hundreds on vitamins, garlic pills and other potential remedies.


"Nothing's helped," she said.
 
And there's this, from the SF Chronicle a few months ago:

Nasty disease -- or is it delusion?
Thousands claim to have skin ailment; many doctors skeptical

Erin Allday, Chronicle Staff Writer

Friday, June 2, 2006


The Bay Area might be home to a small cluster of a horrifying and as-yet-incurable disease that leaves patients with open sores all over their bodies and strange, unidentifiable objects poking out of their skin.

Or not. It's possible that this mystery disease is all in their heads.

The disease is called Morgellons, and no one knows what causes it or if it's even real.

After more than a year of pressure from patients convinced they have Morgellons, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will begin investigating the ailment for the first time and determine, once and for all, whether it exists. The CDC started organizing a committee this week for that purpose.

"Not a day passes when I don't talk to somebody who claims to have this," said CDC spokesman Dan Rutz. "In the absence of any objective review, people have jumped to conclusions and found each other on the Internet and formed their own belief structure. We really need to debunk this if there isn't anything to it or identify if there is indeed a new, unrecognized disease that needs attention."

No one knows how long Morgellons has been around, but about four years ago a South Carolina mom who says her three children have the disease was researching their symptoms and found reference to a 1674 medical study that described a similar condition, called Morgellons.

The disease sounds like a nightmare. In fact, one Web site claims Morgellons was "invented" recently to help promote a summer horror movie. A search on the Internet reveals dozens of people who have posted magnified photos of their symptoms -- usually twisted, thread-like protrusions from the skin and sometimes hazy images that look like small bugs.

It doesn't help convince disbelieving doctors that many sufferers complain of hard-to-believe symptoms. One San Francisco woman describes "tiny green shrimp" that come from her face, and she said she saw a fly pop out of her right eye. Even doctors and patients who believe Morgellons exists cringe at such reports.

"There really are physical symptoms that occur in people who are not crazy, although once they have it, it usually makes them pretty crazy," said San Francisco Lyme disease specialist Dr. Raphael Stricker, who has seen several patients with Morgellons symptoms. Stricker and a handful of other doctors believe Morgellons is somehow related to Lyme disease because so many patients have already been diagnosed with Lyme disease.

Stricker and a colleague, nurse practitioner Ginger Savely, have written the only paper on the disease, published this year in the American Journal of Clinical Dermatology. There have been no clinical studies.

The nonprofit Morgellons Research Foundation, founded by the South Carolina mom, is the only group keeping track of the disease worldwide. It uses a self-reporting system that encourages people who think they have Morgellons to register with the foundation Web site. So far, 4,131 households have registered, about 300 of them in the Bay Area. California has the most cases, making up 23 percent of the total.

One prominent name associated with the malady is former Oakland A's and Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Billy Koch, who left baseball because of pain and chronic fatigue he blames on Morgellons. Last week, a young man in Texas killed himself with a drug overdose in what authorities believe may have been an attempt to alleviate Morgellons-like symptoms that were making him miserable.

San Francisco resident Pat Miller, 49, said he went to 11 doctors with his symptoms after he developed an itchy spot on the back of his head that turned into a sore and finally a "mound of skin ... with deep black pits." He also describes a "crawling sensation" and a feeling like something is "trying to grow down into my skin, like a drill or a corkscrew."

Dermatologists said the black pits were just blackheads. Almost every doctor he saw diagnosed him with delusional parasitosis -- a psychiatric condition with symptoms eerily similar to Morgellons, in which sufferers believe they are infested with parasites.

"None of them once used a microscope. None of them once did any kind of invasive exam," Miller said. "To prove that I wasn't crazy, I had to go into a psychological program. A psychiatrist and several therapists all agreed that I wasn't crazy, that I did have a physical disease, and basically pushed me to pursue the fight, to prove that I wasn't delusional."

Eventually, someone referred Miller to Savely, who is considered one of the few Morgellons experts. She has about 125 patients at her San Francisco practice, not all of them from the Bay Area.

"These people, I feel terrible for them. They're suffering a ghastly disease, and no one will believe them, no one will help them, and in fact, everyone tells them they're crazy," Savely said. "If any one of these people came to me alone, I might have been skeptical of their stories. But when you have more than 100 people, and their stories are identical, that's impressive."

Few doctors have examined under a microscope samples of the multicolored filaments or black dots patients describe. Many who have seen the evidence brush it off as lint or dirt or something else from around the house.

Stricker said he has studied samples under a microscope, and they look like cellulose fibers, which typically would be found in plant material.

"When you see it, it's very hard to explain away. These patients have something that's really not delusional," Stricker said.

Still, plenty of doctors disagree.

Many Morgellons symptoms -- the feeling of something crawling beneath the skin, the open sores, even patients' conviction that they are absolutely infested with a parasite -- can be attributed to delusional parasitosis, doctors say. The sores are self-inflicted, caused when people scratch at a spot they think is infected, they say.

"There are a huge number of people out there with (delusional parasitosis), and most of them are not getting adequate treatment because they have this fixed belief," said Dr. Dan Eisen, a UC Davis dermatologist. "It's probably just a group of patients who haven't gotten the appropriate treatment, and they're calling it Morgellons."

The standard treatment for delusional parasitosis is anti-psychotic medication. Stricker and other physicians are treating Morgellons patients with a combination of antibiotics and anti-parasitic and anti-fungal drugs, but they don't alleviate all the symptoms.

Miller agreed to take anti-psychotic medication for a few months, but it didn't help, he said, and a therapist told him to stop taking it. Since he started seeing Savely, he's been taking the antibiotics and anti-parasitic and anti-fungal drugs, and he said his health has improved.

But he's still angry when he thinks of the doctors who brushed off his symptoms and insisted he was delusional without bothering to give him a thorough exam.

"I've been basically ostracized at work. I used to have big boils on top of my head, and I didn't look great," Miller said. "I don't really want an 'I'm sorry' from these doctors -- I just want them to come on board. I want them to stop treating me like I'm crazy."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morgellons
Symptoms

-- Unexplained sores that won't heal

-- Materials protruding from the skin that look like thin, multicolored threads or black sand

-- Chronic fatigue

-- "Brain fog," including difficulty concentrating and short-term memory problems

-- Muscle and joint pain

-- Sensation of something crawling beneath the skin

How it often is diagnosed

-- Delusional parasitosis

-- Skin conditions such as scabies, eczema or acne

-- Symptom of Lyme disease

History of Morgellons

1674: A British researcher identifies a mysterious disease that causes a rash and strange hairs to break out on children. He names the disease Morgellons.

2002: A South Carolina mom researching her children's strange skin condition starts calling it Morgellons and creates the Morgellons Research Foundation.

2005: By December, nearly 2,000 households worldwide have registered on the Morgellons Research Foundation Web site as living with someone with symptoms.

2006: In May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decides to investigate and determine whether Morgellons is a real disease.


Sources: Morgellons Research Foundation, Chronicle research
 
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Have any of these people been tried on Pimozide?
:laugh:

Delusional parasitosis, real infectious disease, or a new combination of a sort of infectious pseudocyesis-like phenomena?
 
How ironic, I saw an episode of Dateline last night about this. At first I thought it was crap, but then I was curious. There are obviously 2 sides to every story and considering that science is forever evolving, how does one know if this is just a psychosomatic disorder or if it is something that science hasn't come across yet? Think about all of the new species continuously being discovered. Can anyone for sure say it is not real or possible, when nobody knows what is possible? Just b/c there is not a promising medical explanation of it now, does not mean it is not possible or will not be available one day.
 
psychmom1 said:
How ironic, I saw an episode of Dateline last night about this. At first I thought it was crap, but then I was curious. There are obviously 2 sides to every story and considering that science is forever evolving, how does one know if this is just a psychosomatic disorder or if it is something that science hasn't come across yet? Think about all of the new species continuously being discovered. Can anyone for sure say it is not real or possible, when nobody knows what is possible? Just b/c there is not a promising medical explanation of it now, does not mean it is not possible or will not be available one day.
It's a good point...and I tend to agree with out. As physicians in particular, we are obligated to take complaints like this seriously until any and all organic or physiologic causes are ruled out.

I had an example of this yesterday, when a known histrionic day hospital patient "fell" for the 12th time this year. It was early in the morning and I was tempted to brush her off and tell her to rest. But I did the workup, with enzymes, ekg, etc. She wound up having a pulse of 42, 96/60, with new t-wave inversion and borderline enzymes.

The situations are vastly different, I know, but they of course should rule out all causes before sending them to us. 😉

The original case reports were found in the 1600's I believe - they described this syndrome well apparently. So it isn't entirely new.

Imagine the potential lawsuits if they find this to be a newly emergent, previously hibernating helminth or something...

Did anyone notice the link to the suicide hotline at the bottom of the official webpage? 😕
 
Anasazi23 said:
It's a good point...and I tend to agree with out. As physicians in particular, we are obligated to take complaints like this seriously until any and all organic or physiologic causes are ruled out.

I had an example of this yesterday, when a known histrionic day hospital patient "fell" for the 12th time this year. It was early in the morning and I was tempted to brush her off and tell her to rest. But I did the workup, with enzymes, ekg, etc. She wound up having a pulse of 42, 96/60, with new t-wave inversion and borderline enzymes.

The situations are vastly different, I know, but they of course should rule out all causes before sending them to us. 😉

The original case reports were found in the 1600's I believe - they described this syndrome well apparently. So it isn't entirely new.

Imagine the potential lawsuits if they find this to be a newly emergent, previously hibernating helminth or something...

Did anyone notice the link to the suicide hotline at the bottom of the official webpage? 😕

Never seen one. But, I find it interesting that the patients quoted in these and other news reports all seem to be using poor defense mechanisms (two examples: In another story one patient was quoted as saying that he would kill the next doctor who told him that he was delusional. Also, the founder of the website was quoted as saying that she would kill herself if she didn't find out what it was.)

This speaks to psychiatric causes. However, the apparent fact that the threads (or whatever) didn't correlate to any known forensic database, seems to contradict this.
 
Miklos you write: This speaks to psychiatric causes. "

That's a rather categorical statement to make! Maybe it's an expression of their utter frustration at not being able to get a convincing explanation of their symptoms.
I can also accuse you of being paranoid and aggressive! Does that make it true?


I also saw the Dateline program and was myself skeptical UNTIL the FBI forensic expert said that the fibers do not match any of the over one hundred thousand know fibers that are catalogued by their lab!!!!

Time to start a true study of this condition!

Remember, 25 years ago the entire scientific community was baffled by the sudden appearance of hundreds of KS cases before they discovered HIV and the link!

Try to keep an open mind.
That's what learning is all about.

Nothing more frightening than a narrow minded shrink!
 
res-2007 said:
Miklos you write: This speaks to psychiatric causes. "

That's a rather categorical statement to make! Maybe it's an expression of their utter frustration at not being able to get a convincing explanation of their symptoms.
I can also accuse you of being paranoid and aggressive! Does that make it true?


I also saw the Dateline program and was myself skeptical UNTIL the FBI forensic expert said that the fibers do not match any of the over one hundred thousand know fibers that are catalogued by their lab!!!!

Time to start a true study of this condition!

Remember, 25 years ago the entire scientific community was baffled by the sudden appearance of hundreds of KS cases before they discovered HIV and the link!

Try to keep an open mind.
That's what learning is all about.

Nothing more frightening than a narrow minded shrink!

Umm... Did you read the last sentence of my post?
 
If you would like to find out more information about Morgellons Disease or talk with people who think they have it, you should check out Moregellonsite.com
 
I admitted a guy the other day with symptoms like this. (And this is Texas, which is supposed to be Morgellons territory, although I haven't really heard much about it.) No other psych symptoms, gainfully employed, high functioning veteran.

Anyway, apparently this guy was totally fine, no psych hx, until 4 months ago, then he was admitted for cellulitis (I suspect from picking at his skin) then came back to the ER the day of discharge and was admitted to psych complaining of "elastic fibers" under his skin. Risperdal helped a little as an inpatient, but he went off meds and missed his follow-up.

Fast forward to a few days ago, and he shows up in the ER wanting to see Derm about "these fibers." He's got a bunch of sores now, most of which he denies are self-inflicted. He says the fibers "have come up now" and is hopeful that this will cause people to believe him, since they're visible now. He also has a bunch of cuts around his eyes where he was trying to cut them out before they went into his eyes. Refused to be admitted to psych because it's not a psych problem, so I had to OPC him.

Sadly, he went to the other team. He would have been an interesting patient to follow.
 
I was asked by our ER to evaluate a patient with these classic symptoms... luckily the patient had come in with reams of paper containg research on the topic, so the ER told me on the phone what I was getting into... so I spent a little time on the internet researching Morgellan's before going into the interview, but still unclear as to whether it is a parasitic disease or a psychotic manifestation.

So here's my story.

45 year old African American male who lives in a FEMA trailer, who comes to the ER with his 10 year old son, complaining of parasitic infestation of his body, and infestation of his trailer with tiny flies. Patient presents with multiple blackened lesions covering scalp, face, neck, trunk and limbs. Patient's young son states that they have been to different ER's nightly for the last several months, often spending the entire night, only to be discharged. ER physician is concerned this may be a child protection issue as the father is a single parent and a disabled postal worker.
Upon detailed history and physical examination (yes, we do these sometimes 🙄 ) lesions are located everywhere EXCEPT majority of back. To rule out confounding issues such as clothing impeding flies or parasites, patient is instructed to remove ALL clothing, and lesions are also present on inner thighs and buttocks, but NO lesions are seen anywhere in the middle of the back. This is the only area exclusively spared, coinciding with areas patient would be unable to reach with his hands.
Patients narrates itching in the specific area of each lesion, followed by discovery of minute red fiber in lesion. Patient has seen dermatology, infectious disease, and scores of ER doctors, who have not witnessed this fiber.
Patient is otherwise free of delusions or other psychoses.
Interview with the son reveals he is well-groomed, nourished, and happy, precluding involvement of CPS. Son is also lesion free, although he lives exclusively in the same trailer. Son initially states he has seen the flies, but is unable to describe or elaborate upon the said insects.
Patient states that upon one of his former hospital visits, an unknown woman stepped into his room, and told him to not divulge her identity to anyone as it would endanger her job, and left a piece of paper with the word "Onchocerciasis" on it. She was not a physician, per patient.
I recommended an Ophtalmology follow-up for the patient, even though I was sceptical, and recommended (strongly) to the patient that he follow-up with outpatient psychiatry, and to the ER recommended discharge to home, as I could not prove harm to self, others, or a gravely disabled status of this patient.
Any thoughts, recommendations?
 
Hello Medicos,

I came across your discussion while googling Morgellons disease. I have a personal interest in the subject of Morgellons Disease as I am one of the afflicted. To find such a diverse wealth of medical knowledge here was like manna from heaven. I have come here asking you to accept me into your discussion and ultilise the multi-disciplinary problem solving skills you all have developed to move us all forward with an understanding of this condition.

For me Morgellons Disease is a convenient moniker to describe what to a layperson is otherwise inexplicable. Please do not assume when I use the term Morgellons I necessarily subscribe to everything writ of it. More precicely I hold with the commonality of physical symptoms described under that banner. Anyone reading through the the official Morgellons site could reasonably suggest the symptoms listed are non-specific. However, an understanding of this condition gives context to these vaguaries.

I am not by any means a person of science and I will therefore limit my speculation as to what this condition may be. Primarily I believe it to be an organism falling under the broad banner of 'fungal' with possible subsets of mold and or cyanobacteria. All of which you may be well aware, to this point in time have no significant status as human pathogens.

To fuel the discussion, I will briefly outline the course of this condition in my experience.

Approx 25 years ago I developed an intense stinging/biting/itching sensation following sex. At the same time a proliferation of white tightly woven lintballs approximately the size and shape of a grain of rice appeared in my body hair, clothing and bedding. I was diagnosed as having scabies and successfully treated with a commercial scabicide. Only many years later did I realise that scabies has a six week life cycle which precluded such an immediate reaction.

Some 5 years later I developed a small itchy spot on my leg. It grew from a spot into a large 3 inch diameter weeping rash. After several months of treatment with cortisones it 'produced' a lump of dark blue fibres. These I teased from the centre of the rash with tweezers. From then on the rash healed rapidly.

About 3 years ago, during a period of high stress, I entered what I thought was a very dusty environment for about half an hour. The longer I stayed the more I felt itchy and as if I was being bitten. The next morning I woke to a constant and intense itching and the lint balls as described above. As well, very small fibrous dust (see pic above) began to 'inhabit' and 'exude' from every fabric in my house. Despite having seen several doctors and two dermatologists over these 3 years I have not had two concurrent diagnoses nor any successful treatment. So far the diagnostic roll call is, an allergy, stress reaction, environmental allegen, anxiety, excessively dry skin, 'I don't know, but it's not fatal', hyper-sensitive skin, and for the one doctor who actually examined my skin at a magnification greater than that of a hand held magnifying glass and noted a fine dust of fibres; juvenile hair fragments. When pressed he acknowledged he had never seen such fragments before nor read of them in medical literature. Nor seen juvenile hair in flourescent orange, navy blue or emerald green!

During this last three years I have been under the distinct impression that people in my close proximity feel itchy in my presence, this is verified by the admitedly subjective observation of them scratching themselves, but also regular exclamations of 'something just bit me'. A refrain which causes me perpetual disquiet.

My present doctor takes the Mayo Clinic view on Morgellons; treat what you can treat and watch the developments.

So thats my story and my mission statement all rolled into one. What I'd like you people to do is use Morgellons as a metaphor to discuss stuff like evidence based medicine, ethics, duty of care, judgmentalism in diagnosis, parasitism - is it under rated, recognising emerging conditions, epidemilogical processes relevant to identifying emerging threats to public health and maybe even pathology - can it deliver when the going gets tough?

If anyone chooses to take up the baton and respond, I would again be proud to be a part of the human race.

Thanks for readng it,

Faatang
 
It's now September, Faatang...how are you doing?

A friend just told me she has Morgellon’s; I believe her. She has had extensive exposure to dirt, mold and sewage due to a lengthy house remodel, and she is so sick she can't finish it. When mold was spotted in a closet floorboard a year ago, she began tearing out the infected wood, and it was everywhere. Now her million dollar home is in rubble. Her layman's research indicates there is an old sewage treatment tower in her neighborhood (which the city and county denies knowledge of) and she suspects it is leaching up into her soil. (Sounds like a job for Erin Brockovich)

She used to be a tough cookie, a big DIY'er, and so when she found the mold and contracted with an architect to rebuild, remodel, and add a second story, she did a lot of the demo work herself, including pulling out the rotted wood and helping dig the new footings and pipe trenches (unfortunately, sans a respiratory mask.) That's when her symptoms started and her soil tested positive for stacci botrus. Now she has "stringy tenticals growing out of her neck" and when she pulls them or cuts them she says they retreat and multiply. I know how bizarre it sounds, and that's what worries me! I KNOW if I had these symptoms I would be obsessed with them too!! (Just because you are paranoid doesn't mean they are not out to get you.) How could she make up this s#*t when she had never heard anything like it before? She only started researching it herself when her dermitologist refused to touch her neck, even with gloves, and he said he had no idea what it was, and then he gave her the bum's rush. That's what triggered her concern that it wasn't just a parasite. And she's so mentally tired and grossed out about her neck, she is contemplating suicide.

Is it a biblical plague of the "last days," a man-made biological weapon or experiment gone wrong? Have simple parasites mutated and started glowing in the dark because of our jacuzzi chemicals and microwaves? Just because the name is old, doesn't mean it's the same organism or syndrome that was dubbed Morgellon's in the 1600's. Does the fact that it is sounds like science fiction automatically make it a "fictional" malady? Or is it such a horrendous fate that we must start finding data on it YESTERDAY, before it catches the rest of us by surprise?

Beloved Students: What's been going on with you lately? Any new cases or personal experiences? We must have the technology to discover the truth by now ~ Why is there so much skepticism and resistance to the curiosity of it all?

And if it is only psychological, why is it so contagious in THAT form? Could it be mass hysteria or psychological warfare? Is it possible that somebody might spike our water systems with a special hallucinogen?

Selfishly, I not only want my friend cured, I want to make sure my kids and I never get it. 😳
 
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