U.S.
to study bizarre medical condition
By
MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer Wed Jan 16, 6:45 PM ET
ATLANTA
- It sounds like a freakish ailment from a horror movie: Sores erupt on your skin,
mysterious threads pop out of them, and you feel like tiny bugs are crawling all
over you. Some experts believe it's a psychiatric phenomenon, yet hundreds of
people say it's a true physical condition. It's called Morgellons, and now the
government is about to begin its first medical study of it.
The
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is paying California-based health
care giant Kaiser Permanente $338,000 to test and interview patients suffering
from Morgellons' bizarre symptoms. The one-year effort will attempt to define
the condition and better determine how common it is.
The
study will be done in northern California, the source of many of the reports of
Morgellons (pronounced mor-GELL-uns). Researchers will begin screening for patients
immediately, CDC officials said Wednesday. A Kaiser official expects about 150
to 500 study participants.
Morgellons
sufferers describe symptoms that include erupting sores, fatigue, the sensation
of bugs crawling over them and perhaps worst of all mysterious red,
blue or black fibers that sprout from their skin. They've documented their suffering
on Web sites.
Some
doctors believe the condition is a form of delusional parasitosis, a psychosis
in which people believe they are infected with parasites.
In
the study, volunteers will get blood tests and skin exams, as well as psychological
evaluations, said Dr. Michele Pearson, who leads a CDC task force overseeing the
study.
Pearson
suggested the study will help determine if Morgellons is the same as delusional
parasitosis or something new.
Study
participants will be drawn from Kaiser's 3.4 million health insurance customers
living mainly in the Sacramento and San Francisco areas and as far south as Fresno.
CDC
officials acknowledged the study is limited and the results won't give a complete
picture of the problem.
Randy
Wymore, an Oklahoma State University pharmacologist, who believes the condition
is not a psychiatric one, says there is distrust by some Morgellons sufferers
toward the new study.
Some
of these patients who are Kaiser Permanente members have said they don't like
the way they've been treated by Kaiser doctors and probably won't participate,
said Wymore, who formerly was a research director for a patient group and hears
constantly from Morgellons patients.
"They
felt that Kaiser was particularly unreceptive to treating them for anything other
than a psychiatric disorder," said Wymore.
A
Kaiser official said he had not heard such complaints. No patient will be excluded
from participation, even if a doctor previously determined the problem was psychological,
said Dr. Joe Selby, director of research for Kaiser Permanente Northern California.
Kaiser
researchers will look in their records for previous patients who in the last 18
months reported Morgellons-like symptoms. They will be asked to participate in
more medical evaluations.
Any
fibers or specks that are collected will be analyzed at the Armed Forces Institute
of Pathology, Selby said. Doctors who believe the condition is psychiatric suspect
fibers are likely just threads from clothing.
The
CDC has been getting more than a dozen calls a week from self-diagnosed Morgellons
patients for well over a year, and was urged to investigate by U.S. Sen. Dianne
Feinstein of California and others.
Some
say they've suffered for decades, but the syndrome did not get a name until 2002,
when "Morgellons" was chosen from a 1674 medical paper describing similar
symptoms.