Wow cool deal! Must be nice living there, with a nice variety of fresh foods to eat.
I realize in hindsight from this experience that I was over reacting, after all, a parasite infection can be handled by drugs or herbs.
But the thought of worms either becoming concentrated in numbers or migrating to other body parts was a weakening thought.
Another reason I am more accepting is that after some google research, some websites have indicated that the most common type of worm in salmon and most fish are roundworms, and that they cannot survive in humans long term, and after 3-10 days should die off. On those websites the symptoms were listed as cramping, bloating, diareha. I just have the cramping
abdominal pain that has lasted for about 1 1/2 days now. But it's nothing severe, I just expect perfect health and any slight deviation from that feeling always concerns me as I feel vitality and health are achievable goals to maintain throughout our lives.
So, I will continue to purchase salmon and the other shellfish, and I will be more diligent in slicing up the fish slowly and properly to inspect it for worms deep in the flesh. Mostly they were near the skin, as the fillet was somewhat thick. The inspectors must not have been able to see them so deep in the fillet cut. These worms in the video looked powerful for their size. I recorded the video after 3 hours, and before I put them in the water container, I had them in the same container without water, and i even smeared them with habanero,
thinking it would kill them. I thought it did too, as they seemed dead, but then I added a bunch of water in there and they started swimming crazily for like 3 hours! I can see how these worms try to migrate to other areas of the body because they seem like they are constantly moving and if they penetrate the intestinal lining they can swim into other areas of the body.
Here are some websites that allowed me to come to this conclusion(about fish roundworms not being a problem other than possible discomfort, though not everyone experiences symptoms:
http://seafood.ucdavis.edu/pubs/parasite.htmhttp://www.13.waisays.com/fish.htmFrom this experience I've learned that I should diligently check the fish(albeit destroying it's texture by cutting it up so many times) for more significant live worms and less significant dead worms and put them aside so I can get all the benefits of raw while not succumbing to the worms.