Answer
Jan 09, 2017 - 02:27 AM
I truly am at a loss for what could be causing this. The only think I can tell you is that unless you can actually see a crawling insect with your naked eye, or at least under the lens of a magnifier, and be able to positively identify it, it's not insect related.
Anything smaller than an insect is bacterial. Viruses are even smaller than bacteria. Both have to be seen with a microscope. One thing is for sure, if 9 doctors can't determine what it is, then it may not be identifiable. In the science world, only about 15% of all known insects are classified. In the medical world, only about 5,500 viruses of many thousands are classified. The bottom line, is that what you are dealing with may not be known to the medical community.
You might consider talking to a pathologist and not a medical doctor to determine where to go from here.
Hope this helps.
Ron
Anything smaller than an insect is bacterial. Viruses are even smaller than bacteria. Both have to be seen with a microscope. One thing is for sure, if 9 doctors can't determine what it is, then it may not be identifiable. In the science world, only about 15% of all known insects are classified. In the medical world, only about 5,500 viruses of many thousands are classified. The bottom line, is that what you are dealing with may not be known to the medical community.
You might consider talking to a pathologist and not a medical doctor to determine where to go from here.
Hope this helps.
Ron
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