Other abnormal cutaneous sensations experienced included a
feeling as of trickles of cold water running over various parts
of the skin, and a feeling of insects crawling under the skin.
The latter type of sensation was experienced in a few cases only
and was limited to the arms and legs.
Four cases complained of feeling as if a worm was
crawling in their legs, under the skin. In one case where I was
present at the time of the complaint, a slow wave of contraction
was seen to travel along a bunch of muscle fibres in the
gastrocnemius muscle at the site of the complaint.
Wallis, A. L. (1957). An investigation into an unusual disease seen in epidemic and sporadic form in a general practice in Cumberland in 1955 and subsequent years, M.D. Thesis. University of Edinburgh.
I have always thought that this passage was of interest in relation to this subject. Unfortunately I have lost the web address.
EDIT
https://www.era.lib.ed.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/1842/9382/Wallis1957_FULL.pdf
Thanks
@chrisb this is quite an interesting read.
the symptoms in that UK village didnt seem to be very extraordinary, but so many ppl reported them and fell sick. the ONSET symptoms were:
- diarrhea, some nausea, vomiting in first 12 - 24 hours
- throat irritable
- slight degree of laryngitis
- inflammatory reaction in trachea
- some had cough, worst bedtime/getting up
- dry nose, prickling feeling in post-nasal region
- some had sneezing spasms, followed by rhinorrhoea
with disease progressing, some said their "legs were gone" (weak, it seems).
they suspected droplet infection. a large number of common culprits was ruled out (psittacosis, bacterial/viral infections). nothing was ever found, when i understand this right.
... and all those budgies died...
i read, that a considerable number of ill households had budgies, and that a lot of them died.
they suspected, the disease was transfered to them.
and also, budgies would infect each other (cage was not sterilized, the next healthy budgie in it died from the same disease as the previous bird).
im wondering, if they could "exhume" some of those dead birds and try to find something with more advanced technology.
there were breaders with many fatalities, who knows if they buried them somewhere in the garden so.