Morgellon’s Disease and Neurocutaneous Syndrome (NCS): Cases and Recovery

Authors

  • Omar M. Amin Parasitology Center Inc. (PCI), 11445 E. Via Linda, # 2-419, Scottsdale, Arizona 85259, USA.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-91882-24-2/CH0

Keywords:

Morgellon’s, Neuro-cutaneous Syndrome (NCS), delusional parasitosis, diagnosis, treatment

Abstract

The body of knowledge on delusional parasitosis (often called Morgellons disease) incriminates “delusional patients” as having imaginary external and/or internal symptoms that feel like parasite movements, dismisses them as psychiatric cases, and confuses cause with effect. Based on our research on over 1000 “delusional” patients since 1996 at our Parasitology Center, Inc. (PCI), we have established that the symptoms of crawling and pin-pricking are caused by toxicity from exposure to incompatible dental materials, among other toxicities, that alter the propagation of normal nerve impulses. It is not a parasitic condition. We have also observed that external parasites/organisms including springtails (Collembola), other arthropods, bacteria, and fungi represent only opportunistic infections of skin sites compromised by the toxicity disorder involving the elimination of toxins through the skin. We have described a new pathological disorder, Neuro-cutaneous Syndrome (NCS) primarily associated with dental toxicity to which “delusional parasitosis” and “Morgellons” disease cases could be assigned. We have developed a protocol for the resolution of the symptoms of NCS cases. When followed, all symptoms of NCS, conventionally misdiagnosed as delusional parasitosis, are invariably and irreversibly resolved.

Published

2021-08-23

How to Cite

Omar M. Amin. (2021). Morgellon’s Disease and Neurocutaneous Syndrome (NCS): Cases and Recovery. Morgellon’s Disease and Neurocutaneous Syndrome (NCS): Cases and Recovery, 1. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-91882-24-2/CH0