Eight-year-old girl battles ovarian cancer before ever hitting puberty: Are vaccines, hormones, and GMOs to blame?
(NaturalNews) Ovarian cancer never used to be much of a threat to young
girls, especially girls who have not yet hit puberty and whose ovaries
are still developing. But today, an increasing number of adolescent
girls, including eight-year-old Natalie Cosman of Manchester,
Connecticut, face what doctors are now calling ovarian germ cell tumors,
or tumors that spawn unexpectedly inside young girls' reproductive egg
cells.
A recent
ABC News report explains that in Natalie's
case, the disease began manifesting itself in the form of persistent
stomach pains, symptoms that her doctors routinely dismissed as nothing
more than constipation or a stomach bug. But after a while, Natalie's
pains grew so severe that her parents decided to take her to the
emergency room, where an ultrasound revealed that the pains were the
result of a small cyst in one of Natalie's ovaries.
The diagnosis
came as a shock to Natalie's parents, who were under the impression
that ovarian cancers primarily occur in older women. The
National Cancer Institute (NCI), after all, estimates that as few as two percent of ovarian
cancers occur in girls under the age of 20 -- and only a select few of
these cases, if any, occur in girls that have not yet reached puberty.
But this apparently is no longer the case.
"Especially girls who
haven't had their period yet, nothing should grow on their ovary," said
Dr. Judith Wolf, division chief of surgery at
MD Anderson Cancer Center near Houston, Texas, to
ABC News.
Are environmental chemicals, food toxins to blame for rise in ovarian cancer cases?Dr.
Wolf is right, at least as far as traditional trends are concerned. But
things appear to be changing, as more and more prepubescent females are
developing inexplicable tumors in their reproductive organs that
require aggressive surgeries and toxic chemotherapy to treat in
accordance with Western medicine's guidelines for cancer treatment.
Young Sophie Fry from the U.K., also eight years old, had a similar experience with
ovarian cancer that required her to undergo intense chemotherapy, as well as surgery
to have her tumor and an ovary removed. Sophie is considered to be the
youngest female ever in the U.K. to be stricken with this rare form of
ovarian cancer. (
http://www.mirror.co.uk)
Modern
science claims it is unclear what causes ovarian germ cell tumors, and
whether or not they are the result of genetic or environmental factors.
However, elevating rates of the condition appear to directly correlate
with the steady rise in the number of
vaccines on the typical childhood vaccination schedule, the increased amount of
hormones and antibiotics used in conventional foods, and the continued
and growing use of untested genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) in the
food supply, all of which are linked to fertility problems and cancer.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/037314_ovarian_cancer_young_girl_puberty.html