'Morgellons' Mystery ABC News
Mysterious Colored Fibers Grow on Their Skin Like Hair -- It's a Medical
Mystery.
Aug. 9, 2006 — - Brandi Koch of Clearwater Beach, Fla., says she feels as if
she's living in a horror movie. She claims she has colored fibers coming out of
her skin.
Brandi is married to Billy Koch, a former Major League baseball player who was
one of a handful of pitchers who could throw a ball at more than 100 mph. Koch
says her life was good, until one day in the shower she noticed something
strange -- tiny fibers running through her skin.
"The fibers look like hair, and they're different colors," Koch says.
Koch says she knows that what she's experiencing "sounds crazy," but it's true.
"If I had a family member call me up and say, 'I have this stuff,' I'd say, 'I'm
sending a straitjacket over. You need some help.'"
Anne Dill describes a similar condition. Looking at Dill's life, it appears as
if she's living an idyllic existence in a home on Florida's Lake Mary. Her three
daughters excel in sports and are straight-A students.
But life in the Dill household is far from idyllic. Anne's 40-year-old husband,
Tom, died in January and she believes his death was due to a contagious illness
that has infected her entire family.
Dill describes her family's skin: "There's this fibrous material. It's in
layers." Dill says the skin on their hands is particularly bad, very swollen and
itchy. She says it feels as if bugs are crawling underneath the skin.
Consulting Doctors
Dr. Greg Smith of Gainesville, Ga., has been a pediatrician for the past 28
years. He claims a fiber is coming out of his big toe, and he has video footage
to prove it. "It felt like somebody stuck a pin in my toe and wiggled it and it
just continued to hurt," Smith says. He says he never thought he had bugs. "I've
certainly had those crawling sensations, and the fibers which come out of the
skin are really bizarre, and really odd."
When Koch, Dill and Smith consulted doctors, they received diagnoses that they
call wrong or dismissive. Dill's doctor told her to stop scratching, even though
many of her sores were in places she could not reach.
Koch went to the Mayo Clinic, where doctors didn't believe that the fibers she'd
brought them had grown from her body. "I saw the infectious disease doctor, and
I showed him some samples that I had and he snickered. I can't go through
another doctor blowing me off or looking at me like I'm crazy. I know I'm not,"
says Koch.
Smith -- a doctor himself -- was handed over to a hospital psychiatrist when he
went to the emergency room complaining of a fiber in his eye. He admits that he,
too, would be skeptical if a patient came to him with the same story. "I would
wonder if they'd taken their medicine that day. It makes no sense. It's totally
bizarre. It's something that -- just telling the story is so outlandish on the
face of it -- that no one would believe it," Smith says.
Dr. Vincent DeLeo, chief of dermatology at New York's St. Lukes-Roosevelt
Medical Center, weighed in on what he'd say to someone who came to him with this
condition. "I don't think this is any different than many patients I've seen who
have excoriations and believe that there is something in their skin causing
this."
DeLeo says the open lesions are a result of scratching the skin.
But for biologist Mary Leitao of Surfside Beach, S.C., medical skepticism was
something she refused to accept.
Relying on Your Own Research
Her son, Drew, was just 2 years old when Leitao noticed an odd sore on his lip
that would not heal.
"He very simply said 'bugs,' and he pointed to his lips," says Leitao.
Leitao never expected to find herself at the center of a medical storm. But when
her son complained about that strange sore, the biologist, who once ran the
electron microscope at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, did what any
scientist would do. She took a closer look. "What I saw were bundles of fibers,
balls of fibers," Leitao says. "There was red and blue." Even stranger, they
glowed under ultraviolet light.
Armed with research, Leitao took her son to a doctor at one of the country's
leading hospitals. He dismissed her tale of fibers and wrote to her
pediatrician, saying that her son needed Vaseline for his lips and that his
mother needed a thorough psychiatric evaluation.
Undaunted, Leitao began poring through the medical literature looking for clues.
What she discovered was a 17th-century reference to a strange disease with
"harsh hairs" called "Morgellons."
She named the strange fibers Morgellons disease and put the information on a Web
site, Morgellons.org. Since then, more than 4,500 people have contacted Leitao,
claiming they have Morgellons-type symptoms. The name has stuck, and the disease
was featured on the television show "ER."
But do these fibers grow from inside the body -- as Morgellons patients believe
-- or do they come from the external environment -- a kind of lint -- as the
medical skeptics say?
Searching for an Answer
Forensic scientist Ron Pogue at the Tulsa Police Crime Lab in Oklahoma checked a
Morgellons sample against known fibers in the FBI's national database. "No, no
match at all. So this is some strange stuff," Pogue says. He thinks the skeptics
are wrong. "This isn't lint. This is not a commercial fiber. It's not."
The lab's director, Mark Boese, says the fibers are "consistent with something
that the body may be producing." He adds, "These fibers cannot be manmade and do
not come from a plant. This could be a byproduct of a biological organism."
While they wait for evidence that they hope will convince the medical community
to take them seriously, some Morgellons sufferers wear pink bracelets that say,
simply, "Fortitude."
Dill says she looks at pictures of her family from just four years ago and finds
them unrecognizable. "My kids have to see not only their dad but their mom
disintegrating, and that's gotta be really scary."
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