The snail, littorina scutulata, can survive in a wide range of temperatures and waters |
Rachel Franklin, of Orange County, California, noticed her seven-year-old son Paul’s knee had swelled to the size of an orange. She had previously taken him to the doctor, who said the growth was a staph infection, prescribed antibiotics and told her not to pop it. But when the swelling turned black, and began oozing pus, she decided to defy the orders and drain it. However after popping the wound, she was horrified to a strange black object inside the wound - which she initially believed was a piece of rock.
‘I’m peering at this object and it has a strange look about it,’ she said during an episode of Monster Inside Me, which will be aired on the Discovery Channel next Wednesday, the DailyMail reports.
‘I realised it wasn't a rock. It has whirls on it.
‘I turn it over and I think - I might have laughed out loud. I said, “Paul. This is a snail. It’s a freaking snail.”’
While many would be disgusted at having a mollusc inside their body, Paul simply said it was ‘cool,’ his mother added.
Franklin pictured with Paul and his brother |
The snail had been growing in the tissue above Paul’s knee, with pus and black-looking tissue emerging as the body’s immune system detected a foreign invader. The snail was found to be a littorina scutulata, a type of sea snail that can survive in a wide range of temperatures and waters, biologist Dan Riskin explains in the programme.
‘It can even live outside of water for several weeks by retreating into its shell,' he said.
‘It lives in the harshest intertidal zones and can survive for weeks in a wide variety of temperatures and salt levels.
The subcutaneous tissue of the human body mirrors the harsh conditions where sea snails normally survive.’ Paul's father, Ken, believes the little animal made its way into his son's leg after he fell onto a nest of snail's eggs at the beach in Spooner's Cove, California. Paul, who describes the whole incident as 'crazy' has since named the snail Turbo.
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