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Hunting & Fishing
Worms in deer backstrap
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<blockquote data-quote="Hirschkopf" data-source="post: 4187835" data-attributes="member: 50724"><p>The "holes" look like cross sections of blood vessels to me. I am a pathologist and had forgotten that deer "muscle worms" exist. Some keyboarding led to their likely name "Parelaphostrongylus andersoni", which sounds like something I might have memorized for a test 30 years ago. None of the "scientific" sources I found contained anything useful, including if they are actually big enough to make the structures (normal vessel or a migraton tract is the question) photographed. The general advice of the hunting community is "pick out any worms you can see; cook and enjoy the rest"</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hirschkopf, post: 4187835, member: 50724"] The "holes" look like cross sections of blood vessels to me. I am a pathologist and had forgotten that deer "muscle worms" exist. Some keyboarding led to their likely name "Parelaphostrongylus andersoni", which sounds like something I might have memorized for a test 30 years ago. None of the "scientific" sources I found contained anything useful, including if they are actually big enough to make the structures (normal vessel or a migraton tract is the question) photographed. The general advice of the hunting community is "pick out any worms you can see; cook and enjoy the rest" [/QUOTE]
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