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Frightening Skin Disease Invades L.A. (Morgellons)
KCAL9 ^ | 5/19/06 | KCBS

Posted on 05/19/2006 3:46:43 PM PDT by BurbankKarl

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To: bd476

The SF reference is incorrect. She practices in Austin.

Morgellons: Controversial disease doctors refuse to treat

09:23 AM CDT on Tuesday, May 9, 2006

By Janice Williamson / KHOU

Click to watch video

Imagine being so sick you’re unable to work, but can’t find a doctor who will help you.

KHOU-TV

Mainstream medical professionals don't believe Morgellons is real.

KHOU discovered that is exactly what is happening to a growing number of people in Texas, Florida and California.

Morgellons disease is an illness first documented more than 300 years ago, yet it is still considered a mystery.

Cheryall Spiller moves slower than she once did around her Rosharon farm. The 59-year-old suffers from what she believes is a mystery disease.

“Small white worms that come out of my ears, you can feel them itching in there. You can get a Q-tip and dig them out,” she explained.

Spiller is not alone.

“The sores come up and these fuzzy things come out,” said Stephanie Bailey, Austin resident. “It’s almost like spores or something like that.”

Lesions and scars cover Stephanie Bailey’s arms and legs.

Travis Wilson is a victim too.

“Feeling like bugs are crawling all over you. You can’t sleep. It’s freaky. So he’d go days without sleep,” said Lisa Wilson, patient’s mother.

According to nurse practitioner Ginger Savely, all three may have an emerging sickness called Morgellons disease.

“it just looks you know like somebody picked at something and it got a little infected,” Savely said.

When magnified 60 times the sores take on a different look.

“So you focus a little more you can see the black fibers the white fibers,” Savely said.

Savely admitted the idea of creatures living inside our bodies seems more like science fiction than science.

“I don’t think a person can believe it until they see it with their own eyes,” she said. “The problem is people aren’t looking hard enough, most practitioners are not looking because they are not taking them seriously.”

Mainstream medical professionals don’t believe Morgellons is real.

“I think if we look at what is truly evidence-based medicine, what has been proven based on scientific fact we know we don’t have a means to substantiate her observations,” said Dr. Adelaide Hebert, U.T. Health Science Center Houston.

Dr. Adelaide Hebert said Morgellons exists only in the patient’s mind.

“Many of these patients do have delusion of parasitosis,” Dr. Hebert said. “It is actually not uncommon to have patients come in and describe the sensation that something is crawling on their skin.”

11 News could not locate any Houston doctor who believes in or treats Morgellons. At Oklahoma State University research is underway on a volunteer basis.

Ginger Savely has documented 100 cases and treats her patients with oral and topical antibiotics.

“They can’t get anybody to help them in the medical profession. It’s just a nightmare, a living nightmare. I can’t imagine any worse disease,” she said.

Lisa Wilson’s son became so distraught about his condition he took his own life two weeks ago.

“He would tell me he’d rather have cancer because then he’d know what he was up against,” Lisa Wilson said.

“They’re worried about the bird flu coming, you’ve got something here right now that’s spreadable and it’s being hush-hushed,” Spiller said.

“They told me I was doing it to myself and that I was nuts,” Bailey explained. “I stopped going to doctors because I was afraid they were going to lock me up.”

The scars are more than skin deep.


61 posted on 05/19/2006 5:50:46 PM PDT by visualops (America... www.visualops.com ...is not just a job site.)
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To: alarm rider
"I think you are probably right. Psuedofoliculitus barbs (ingrown hairs) or something simular."

I've read some accounts of Morgellans which indicate that the threads flouresce under black light, which would seem to disqualify natural hair growth.

The first time I read about this, I thought about having worked construction during my summers in high school and installing fiberglass insulation on hot summer days. Regardless of the precautions you take, it's virtually inevitable that some of the fibers will find their way into your dilated pores and for me, anyways, produced the 'bug-crawling' sensation. It could be any number of things, but my inclination is to believe that all the smoke is indicative of some type of fire. My money is either on some type of synthetic fiber which produces an allergic type reaction or some heretofore unidentified mite or like organism.

As a side note, I thought that I'd been bitten or stung by just about everything that bites or stings in North America, less black widows, bears, rattlers and coral snakes (yep, I've got the brown recluse and copperhead credentials, fire ants, fleas, chiggers, ticks, wasps, hornets, bees, dogs, ferrets, small alligators, a snapping turtle, gar and muskellunge.) This week something nailed me on the web between my fourth and social fingers. It initially looked like a chigger bite and formed the characteristic nodule. In my past experience with them they occurred in bunches and this time there was only one. With no woman in my life these days, I'm kind of short on nail polish at home so I laid some superglue over it which reduced the itch, but unlike the welts I've had from chiggers in the past which hardened and shrank away, this one became increasingly tender and after a few days, I lanced it and drained som thick pus...It appears to have a normal scab now and is painless....I'd be interested if anyone has any idea what kind of bug hit me.....

62 posted on 05/19/2006 5:56:08 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Pete from Shawnee Mission; metmom
Those are good points, Pete and Metmom. Pete, they're comparing the catastrophic fatigue from Morgellons to Lyme Disease. The fact that it's a rare disease, mostly found in California, Texas and Florida is good. However, Morgellons disease' rarity does not prove naysayers' contentions that it is a psychosomatic, hysterical illness.

Fortunately there's at least one person performing medical research on Morgellons disease.

Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences

Morgellons Disease

"Randy S. Wymore, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacology and physiology has taken on the research challenge as volunteer director of research for the Morgellons Research Foundation.

'Health care providers are shooting in the dark as to how to treat it. Antibiotics seem to help some, but if they are stopped the symptoms come back,' Wymore says.

In coordinating research efforts, he sees a research challenge and a chance to help.

'I am doing this partly from scientific curiosity, but also with real empathy toward sufferers.'"

Oklahoma State University Morgellons Research

A Times UK article today quotes Dr. Wymore:

"At the moment I'm leaning towards the possibility that some kind of neurotoxin may be involved in this," he said.

"There's clearly something going on. These people are not imagining this."

Times Online UK

63 posted on 05/19/2006 5:58:49 PM PDT by bd476
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To: Cicero

Well, he hasn't even got the name right, or about anything else for that matter.
Stenotrophomonas (Pseudomonas) maltophilia is ubiquitous, and hardly the cause of the described condition.

Background: Stenotrophomonas (Pseudomonas) maltophilia is an aerobic gram-negative bacillus that is an infrequent pathogen in humans and is found in a variety of aquatic environments. S maltophilia is an organism of low virulence and is a frequent colonizer of fluids used in the hospital setting, ie, irrigation solutions and intravenous (IV) fluids, and of patient secretions, ie, respiratory secretions, urine, or wound exudates. S maltophilia usually must bypass normal host defenses to cause human infection. For example, if fluid in an irrigation solution becomes colonized with this organism, irrigating an open wound can cause colonization or infection of the wound. S maltophilia usually is not capable of causing disease in healthy hosts without the assistance of invasive medical devices that bypass normal host defenses.

Pathophysiology: S maltophilia has few pathogenic mechanisms and, for this reason, predominantly results in colonization rather than infection. If infection does occur, invasive medical devices usually are the vehicles by which the organism bypasses normal host defenses. Otherwise, the pathophysiology of this nonfermentative aerobic gram-negative bacillus is not different from other nonfermentative aerobic organisms.


64 posted on 05/19/2006 6:05:29 PM PDT by visualops (America... www.visualops.com ...is not just a job site.)
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To: visualops
Thanks Visualops. Also I have posted more info in #28 , #40 and #63.

65 posted on 05/19/2006 6:07:00 PM PDT by bd476
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To: concerned about politics

I gotta guess illegals. The spot below San Francisco, if that is indeed where it is, is not Silicon Valley proper but more like Salinas, which is much more like Mexico than it is like the United States. Lots of agriculture -- strawberries, artichokes, garlic -- and much of it hand-picked rather than machine-picked. You know the rest.

I'm only surprised that there isn't another big pustule east of there closer to the middle of the state where the really big agriculture happens.


66 posted on 05/19/2006 6:11:56 PM PDT by jiggyboy (Ten per cent of poll respondents are either lying or insane)
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To: bd476

The fact that there is some improvement with antibiotics would suggest a bacterial infection. Since it does not eliminate the problem perhaps this infection is secondary to the real cause.

Perhaps this is a fungal or parasitic disease that reduces the immune response or provides a particular bacterial with some substance that allows it to infect the patient.


67 posted on 05/19/2006 6:23:30 PM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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To: Robert A. Cook, PE; metmom; visualops; Pete from Shawnee Mission; BurbankKarl
Interesting comments, Robert.

The Annals of Medical History, n.s., VII (1935), 467-479, mention the existence of Morgellons disease in the 1600s on the European continent:

SIR THOMAS BROWNE AND THE DISEASE CALLED THE MORGELLONS

By C.E. KELLETT, M.D., M.R.C.P.
NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, ENGLAND

A note to Sir Thomas Browne's "Letter to a Friend"


"...Hairs which have most amused me have not been in the face or head, but on the Back, and not in Men but Children, as I long ago observed in that endemial Distemper of little Children in Languedock, called the Morgellons, wherein they critically break out with harsh Hairs on their Backs, which takes off the unquiet symptoms of the Disease, and delivers them from Coughs and Convulsions."

SIR THOMAS BROWNE AND THE DISEASE CALLED THE MORGELLONS

68 posted on 05/19/2006 6:25:45 PM PDT by bd476
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To: bd476

Of course they're not imagining it, it's a psychological disorder. My grandmother had it for a time. In her case it was a reaction to medication. This is just delusional parasitosis masquarading as a new disease.


69 posted on 05/19/2006 6:27:37 PM PDT by Sir Gawain
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To: Sir Gawain
Sir Gawain wrote: "Of course they're not imagining it, it's a psychological disorder..."

Perhaps you have confused me with someone else. I did not make the statement claiming that Morgellons disease is a case of patients' imaginations.

Sir Gawain wrote: "...My grandmother had it for a time. In her case it was a reaction to medication..."

It's good to hear that your Grandmother's physician discovered the source of her malady.

Sir Gawain wrote: "...This is just delusional parasitosis masquarading as a new disease."

Do you have links to an abstract or full text article citing the research where that claim is made?

If so, perhaps you'd better point the researchers in the direction of the Annals of Medical History where the existence of Morgellons disease was discussed in the 1600s on the European continent.

SIR THOMAS BROWNE AND THE DISEASE CALLED THE MORGELLONS


70 posted on 05/19/2006 6:45:02 PM PDT by bd476
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To: neverdem

ping


71 posted on 05/19/2006 6:48:38 PM PDT by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote!!!)
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To: BurbankKarl

I'm gunna hurl...thx


72 posted on 05/19/2006 6:51:48 PM PDT by countreegurl
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To: bd476

According to this article she moved from Texas to CA. Really makes you wonder though- does this mystery ailment follow her around?

http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/03/30LYME.html


73 posted on 05/19/2006 6:53:28 PM PDT by Tammy8 (Build a Real Border Fence, and secure the border!!!)
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To: visualops
The SF reference is incorrect. She practices in Austin

See post 53.

74 posted on 05/19/2006 6:56:22 PM PDT by Tammy8 (Build a Real Border Fence, and secure the border!!!)
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To: Tammy8
Tammy8 wrote: "According to this article she moved from Texas to CA. Really makes you wonder though- does this mystery ailment follow her around?"

Just about anything is possible, I suppose, but are you also willing to conclude that Morgellons disease followed her via time travel to Europe in the 1600s?

75 posted on 05/19/2006 7:19:47 PM PDT by bd476
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To: visualops

Thanks. That's what happens when you follow google to an unknown site.

But I've always wondered why people would want to drink French bottled water, which was what caught my eye.


76 posted on 05/19/2006 7:20:35 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Mad_Tom_Rackham

Didn't that happen to Rosie Greer?


77 posted on 05/19/2006 7:23:14 PM PDT by ovrtaxt (My donation to the GOP went here instead: http://www.minutemanhq.com/hq/index.php)
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To: FormerACLUmember
Mass hysteria. The media has created is an utterly bogus disease.
78 posted on 05/19/2006 7:24:54 PM PDT by Cementjungle
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To: metmom
FYI

All in the head??

Wolf
79 posted on 05/19/2006 7:31:11 PM PDT by RunningWolf (Vet US Army Air Cav 1975)
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To: bd476

The only proof we have from that time is a description, there is no way to know if it is the same thing. I have read descriptions of illnesses in a PDR and yet many times the illness isn't that at all, just something that sounds the same. I am not a Dr and don't even pretend to know anything about this one way or another. I just think it is odd that this lady is linked to it in 2 states now and she is not a Dr either- she is a nurse practitioner. It may be a real ailment that is being blown off by Drs, but it could also be that this lady is looking to promote this for whatever reason.


80 posted on 05/19/2006 7:47:47 PM PDT by Tammy8 (Build a Real Border Fence, and secure the border!!!)
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