• Patient Report #1- August 1st 2009 : Saturday - 2:58 AM

    "Unusual." That's what they call it. Floyd Montanio. Not often does a man continue living with his gray matter pruned, pickling in the puddle of blood in his imploded and puss-riddled cranium. He still walks, but his coordination is feeble in terms of stability. He doesn't need a walker, but his hunched back doesn't support him much, so he normally moves around with his hands out. His vocal skills aren't good. Floyd normally moans aloud to show emotion, but he doesn't smile or show facial expression. His butter yellow teeth are punctured with caramel colored cavities; some are missing.
    His paper white skin is flaky and covered with liver spots. I seized my thoughts about his constant hair loss. He's nearly bald, but some stiff white hairs poke out of his lumpy head, cratered in the back of his head with the injury that seemed to do no more damage. People consider him a zombie, but that's false. However, this afternoon he stumbled face-first into a teenage girl's arm with his teeth, but that's because he had stumbled while while he was yawning. When the doctors and nurses noticed this, he was being verbally assaulted by the girl until she was escorted out of the hallway, and Floyd into his room. They took her to see what the damage was.
    The girl's wound wasn't severe from what the naked eye could see, but when the little brat stopped balling they could finally get a better look. From what reports had shown, the girl had some grotesque bacteria in her bite mark. It looked like bacteria from the streptococcus pneumoniae disease, yet... it seemed to have a cell wall yet more deformed than streptococcus, so it was left undefined. Today, we still are unsure what this bacteria is.
    Soon after observation, the girl was vomiting in the bathroom. She described it as a pea green, thick liquid. Odd as it was, they couldn't let her go until they found what the problem was. So, truthfully, the bacteria from Floyd's teeth foes have some effect, but all the effects we've seen is drowsiness, sweating, and vomiting. I look forward to documenting tomorrow's events.

    Report by - Dr. Alec Campbell