Doctors Debate Credibility Of Morgellons Disease
Patients Say Growth Causes Them To Itch Uncontrollably
Kaye Koeberle told KPRC-TV in Houston that an unexplainable growth caused her to itch uncontrollably before the growth felt like it had crawled out of her skin."When I would get out of the shower, it would itch so bad I could hardly stand it," Koeberle said. "One day, I was in front of the mirror and I could see these white things, five of them, just sticking out of my shoulder."Nurse practitioner Ginger Savely, who studies Morgellons disease, said she has seen dozens of cases in her office."I think this is like a horrible science fiction movie," Savely said. "First off, all you have is this horrible and scary situation going on in your own body that's different than anything you've ever heard of, so it feels like you've been inhabited by aliens, and then to add insult to injury, no one will believe you."Doctors said they have noticed that many patients who complain about Morgellons symptoms have also been treated or are undergoing treatment for Lyme disease, which suppresses the immune system. The doctors said when the immune system is corrected, the crawling feelings under the patient's skin is often corrected, too.Some patients said they have even tried to perform their own research to show doctors what is living beneath their skin."I took (a sample) and put it in a petri dish," Koeberle said. "Those filaments would grow and get longer and longer, and curl around the petri dish."Even though many doctors do not recognize Morgellons as a disease, Savely said she thinks the sheer number of people reporting symptoms adds to its credibility. California has the most reported cases, followed by Texas, according to the television station."I can't believe the people from all over, all walks of life, would describe something the very same way if it were a delusion," Savely said.And, if it isn't bad enough that there is no treatment, trying to get the research completed to prove the creepy crawlers really exist has proven to be just as difficult. There is no funding available to research it because government health agencies do not recognize it as a disease."I always feel that people should keep an open mind and I think there are scientific experiments, what we call evidence-based medicine, that can prove or disprove that an organism is causing this," said Dr. Stephen Tucker, a dermatologist at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.Additional Resource:
Distributed by Internet Broadcasting Systems, Inc. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


















Three Disney employees are placed on paid leave pending the investigation into Sunday's fatal monorail crash, according to a Disney spokeswoman.
Days before Austin Wuennenberg was killed in a monorail crash at Disney, he helped make a 4-year-old boy's dream come true.
A clerk at a pizzeria cut himself and falsely reported an armed robbery to cover up his drug habit, sheriff's deputies say.
A former Central Florida middle school teacher who pleaded guilty to having sex with a student is sentenced to five years in jail.
Officials investigate the first fatal accident in the 38-year history of Walt Disney World's monorail.

Since Michael Jackson died June 25, fans from around the world have expressed their grief in flowers, balloons, teddy bears, candles, pictures and handwritten notes left throughout the city.
Thousands flock to a small church in Limerick, Ireland, to pray at the stump of a recently cut tree that many believe looks like the Virgin Mary.
Take a quick look at the flicks headed to your multiplex. Check out the trailer, too.













