Why am I here? To bother you, of course

When I use the word "scientist", I mean something pretty specific---someone actually doing experiments and publishing the results. Some physicians are scientists. In fact, the MSTP that Mark H is a part of exists specifically to train doctors to do research and bring the results to the bedside.

Most doctors aren't scientists, by my definition. But good doctors these days have to be able to read and interpret scientific literature if the wish to practice science-based medicine.

I think of ScienceBlogs as a community of scientists communicating with the lay-public and other scientists. I'm happy I've been allowed to contribute as well, and I think it's justified. When I see patients, I do so with a head full of knowledge that is based on reading scientific literature. I then have to digest and regurgitate that literature in a form palatable to everyday folks.

So, now that I've justified my existence, it's time to get back to annoying people.

Steve Novella over at NeuroLogica recently posted a piece on a new "mystery illness". These are always fun. Epidemiology is a fascinating field, and has helped discover HIV, hanta virus, SARS, and many other emerging diseases.

But there is the other kind of "emerging disease": the folie à news. There have been many descriptions in the past of so-called folie à deux, a shared delusion. In the information age (God, I hate that phrase), the internet and television can bring people with similar delusions closer together to share their "folie". One of the most recent examples is so-called Morgellons syndrome. This is a disease named by a woman who thought her child had parasites in his skin. The cause has been taken up by a "scientist" at the University of Oklahoma, and by several websites and support groups.

This "syndrome" differs from emerging diseases such as West Nile Virus in several important ways. Over the next few days, I'll examine some of the reasons that "Morgellons" is not a real illness. Some of the material will be familiar to readers of my old blog, but I'm buffing it up for a fresh discussion. For the first installment, go below the fold...

One of the most cited papers in Morgellons "research" represents a great example of how not to approach medical science. It is worthwhile to dissect it to see what kind of crankery makes it tick. The sections in bold are from the paper itself.

Background

The authors argue for a newly described illness which they call "Morgellons". It resembles in all ways except name delusional parasitosis, a condition where a person is falsely convinced that they have parasites in their skin. In general, if you wish to describe a possible new illness, you should start by coming up with a useful operational definition. This doesn't happen. Instead we get anecdotes.

It begins with a single practitioner's experiences. It's hard to overstate how problematic this is. Early in the HIV epidemic, solo practitioners in a few cities found unusual diseases, communicated with each other, and discovered the AIDS epidemic---the difference was that the discovered real diseases with shared characteristics.

This clinician saw some patients who shared similar characteristics, and, rather than picking the most likely diagnosis, went straight for the zebra. A more apt metaphor might be a unicorn---she made her diagnosis based on a "research foundation" devoted to an illness made up out of whole cloth.

History

The next mistake is in linking the new "disease" with an account from a 17th century observer. The observations are old, non-specific, and based on no current medical science. He described an odd constellation of symptoms, and the Morgellons Movement adopted it. There is no way to validate 400 year old observations.

After co-opting a 400 year-old name, one of the authors started a foundation which "began accepting registrations from people with symptoms of this unrecognized disease." They lay out no clear case definition, and change the characteristics of the disease to fit the patient. "...[I]t soon became evident that other symptoms within this patient group, such as disabling fatigue, life-altering cognitive decline, joint pain, and mood disorders..." sometimes accompanied the skin symptoms. Shifting the goalposts in order to make your case definition more inclusive is not great science.

Symptoms

This section of the paper is devoted to a long list of symptoms which once again fails to give a case definition. In this paper, which purports to report an important emerging disease, it is disturbing that half-way through the paper, no disease has yet been defined. Perhaps one of the worst sins of this section is the confusion of correlation and causation based on a false premise. The authors assume (or beg the question) that Morgellons exists. Based on that assumption they assert that:

[t]he high incidence of psychopathology, which appears to be directly attributable to this disease, confounds the clinical picture for these patients as the seek validation for an insidious dermatologic condition that defies logic, while sometimes exhibiting obvious symptoms of mental illness.

Might they have put the cart before the, er, unicorn? If someone acts mentally ill, and has a bizarre set of illogical symptoms, why not put the blame where it belongs? To take a disease of the mind, and simply assert that it is a disease of the body, will help no one.

The next assertion is truly horrible. "It appears that the putative underlying infectious disease, which has been unrecognized and untreated, can cause psychopathology in many patients."

Holy crap! Now it's an infectious disease?!? Based on what? And it's an infectious disease that affects the skin and central nervous system? Maybe it's a variant of syphilis! How can these few clinicians (OK, only one author is a clinician) have stumbled onto something so important and end up ignored?

Epidemiology and Transmission

OK...time for more unfounded assertions. "The total number of registrations on the Morgellons Research Foundation website is presently 2200, which is believed to be a fraction of the actual number of cases." Believed by whom?

Then of course they run into the same problem they've had from the beginning: "There is some evidence to suggest that skin lesions and fibers may not be readily apparent in all individuals with this disease... ." Then what defines the disease? How does one track the epidemiology of a disease with a name and no definition?

Pathophysiology

And here is the real coup de grace.

Skin biopsies of patients with Morgellons disease typically reveal nonspecific pathology or an inflammatory process with no observable pathogens...In general, pathologists look for signs of known diseases and, thus, may miss clues of Morgellons disease in biopsies.

OK. I can't go on. It's not just that a mainstream journal would publish such crap. It's that it makes my head hurt. But I will form a logical hypothesis that my headache has something to do with reading, sitting at the computer, and being frustrated. It seems unreasonable to posit that it is due to some unknown infectious agent that can be neither measured nor defined.

In the discussion section of the paper, the authors invoke Vienese physician Ignaz Semmelweis, a physician criticized as a crank in his own time, but later lauded as a hero. Robert Park said, "to wear the mantle of Galileo it is not enough that you be persecuted by an unkind establishment, you must also be right." This paper is not right---it's not even wrong.

Savely, V., Leitao, M. (2006). The Mystery of Morgellons Disease: Infection or Delusion?. American Journal of Clinical Dermatology, 7(1), 1-5.

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Maybe someone is being Sokaled? One can only hope.

Morgellons. Aren't they the spawn of Morgul, the friendly drelb? [ask someone older than 45]. If so, was Morgul's friendliness an aberration or did global warming turn drelbs unfriendly?

By natural cynic (not verified) on 23 Mar 2008 #permalink

It's definitely not a Soakaling. The folks who wrote the article are also involved with the Morgellons Research Foundation. Although I don't know much about the journal in question, I worry about their editorial board.

The strange thing is that the main criterion for this to be "Morgellons Disease" are the mystery fibers, yet there is no explanation or investigation into the composition or cause of the fibers. There are some unsupported hypotheses, but nothing to determine their validity.

I really love how they insist that "Morgellons Disease" isn't caused by being crazy, yet note the high incidence of craziness among those with "Morgellons Disease." Wait, what?

Since I'm not a doctor, biologist, or any other related type of professional, I am curious about one thing. Is there a benign or unrelated explanation for the fibers that are reported in the article?

Egaeus, I am sorry I cannot cite my source off the top of my head (on demand, I will try to find it). A dermatologist has had, some of, said fibers analyzed and found them to be synthetic. An explanation is that people who have phantom parasites scratch a lot, bleed a bit, and incorporate environmental fibers in the scabs.

Very nice post.

I love the smell of crank in the morning. :)

By student_b (not verified) on 23 Mar 2008 #permalink

When I use the word "scientist", I mean something pretty specific---someone actually doing experiments and publishing the results.

I think of ScienceBlogs as a community of scientists communicating with the lay-public and other scientists.

Fewer than half of the bloggers at ScienceBlogs are scientists as you define the term.

Then I hereby renounce my inferiority complex, and announce the start of my superiority complex. MUWAHAHAHA!

Congrats on your new location, Pal. Seriously,( despite experiencing Schadenfreude and snarky good fun ) ,when I read these "theorists" or listen to Woo-Meisters like Gary Null ,I wonder sometimes,are they just learning disabled or seriously mentally ill ? Focusing on a single fact and ignoring the body of research,believing in imaginary creatures(Morgellons) , not believing in actual causative agents(HIV),grandiosity,paranoia, strange ideas about food , inability to consider others! points of view : sounds like a list of symptoms to me.

By Denice Walter (not verified) on 24 Mar 2008 #permalink