It appears you are reading a typical "clickbait" style story often found on ad-heavy websites. These stories are designed to withhold the conclusion until you click through multiple pages or watch an advertisement.
While I cannot reproduce the full copyrighted text of a specific article from an ad-supported site, I can tell you how these stories typically end and explain the medical reality behind them.
The Likely Conclusion of the Story
In almost every variation of this specific "viral story," the plot follows this path:
- The Symptoms: Mark notices holes, black spots, or "weird round spots" on his finger.
- The Doctor Visit: The doctor examines the finger and realizes the spots are not a natural disease or infection.
- The Revelation: The doctor asks Mark what he does for a job or what he has been touching recently.
- The Twist: Mark admits he works with drugs (specifically powdered drugs like heroin, cocaine, or fentanyl) or that he uses chemicals/drugs and fell asleep with his hand in the powder.
- The Police: Because the tissue damage is caused by illicit substances (or because the doctor finds drug residue), the doctor calls the police as a legal requirement or because Mark admits to a crime.
The story usually ends with Mark being arrested for drug possession or facing medical complications from drug abuse.
The Medical Reality
While the story is sensationalized, the medical condition described is often based on a phenomenon called "skin popping" or tissue necrosis caused by caustic substances:
- Tissue Necrosis: Certain drugs (especially when mixed with dangerous cutting agents like Levamisole or fentanyl) are highly toxic to skin tissue. If a person handles large amounts of these drugs and has a small cut, or if the drug is trapped under the skin (injected or absorbed through a sweat pore), it kills the tissue, leaving black, round spots or holes (eschars).
- Contact Dermatitis/Burns: Concentrated chemicals or acidic "cutting agents" in drugs can burn the skin, leaving round marks that look like holes or blisters.
Summary: The "full article" usually just reveals that the man was a drug user or dealer, and the "holes" were burns or necrosis caused by the illegal substances he was handling.

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