Saturday, January 22, 2011

4-Year Old Gets Mastectomy, Survives Breast Cancer

Mastectomy for a preschooler

CNN

Aleisha Hunter is not your average 4-year-old. In fact, she's the youngest breast cancer survivor in Canada.

Not exactly the news her mother Melanie was expecting when she noticed a small lump in her daughter's right breast while bathing her when she was 2. Finally after trying to figure out what was causing Aleisha so much pain, at the age of 3, doctors diagnosed juvenile breast carcinoma, a very rare form of cancer...

[Full Article]


Toddler Aleisha Hunter Among Youngest to Survive Breast Cancer

Two years ago, Aleisha Hunter got breast cancer, making her one of the nearly 300,000 new annual cases to surface.

The difference? Aleisha was a 2-and-a-half-year-old toddler when the small lump developed in her chest. Doctors diagnosed her with juvenile breast carcinoma when she was only 3.

Surgical oncologist Nancy Down of North York General Hospital in Ontario, Canada, who operated on the little girl, tells the "Today" show that Aleisha's cancer was a form usually found in children -- and highly uncommon...

[Full Article]


3-YEAR-OLD GIRL SURVIVED BREAST CANCER {ALEISHA HUNTER}



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uObkZQUoCFM

InfamousRedzz | January 20, 2011

Little Aleisha Hunter underwent surgery for a double Mastectomy to treat her juvenile strain of breast cancer, making her one of world's youngest survivors of the disease.

3-Year-Old Gets Mastectomy To Beat Breast Cancer


Matt Lauer On Today Show (January 20th 2011)


[Webmaster - Could it be that this was a result of rBGH?]


'Precocious Puberty' Is on the Rise

AlterNet

Hormone-mimicking chemicals found in food, water, and many consumer goods may well be the cause of why children as young as eight are showing signs of sexual development.
Kids these days are growing up too fast -- in more ways than one. American girls are reaching puberty up to a year earlier than in previous generations, with some children showing signs of sexual development as young as age 3. In extreme cases, girls are budding breasts before they've even learned to read.

Researchers call this phenomenon "precocious puberty," which some say is on the rise. Forty-eight percent of African-American girls and 15 percent of Caucasian girls show physical signs of puberty by age 8, according to a study of 17,000 U.S. girls published in Pediatrics in 1997. In a subsequent study of more than 2,000 boys, lead author Marcia Herman-Giddens found that 38 percent of African-American boys and 30 percent of Caucasian boys showed signs of sexual development by age 8...

[Full Article]


Do You Know That Your Child Is Drinking Milk Containing Hormones and Steroids That Make a Cow Look like Arnold Schwarzenegger in the Terminator Film?

There are two types of dairy products. Those dairy products derived from cows carefully raised on organic dairy farms and those cows who are force-fed GMO corn, confined in pens, knee-deep in urine soaked manure, pumped up on hormones, steroids and antibiotics. We applaud the conscientious organic farmers who are not the subject of this blog.

Bovine growth hormone occurs naturally in dairy cows and is present in all raw milk. However, a synthetic form of this hormone called rBGH (recombinant bovine growth hormone or artificial growth hormone) is produced by Monsanto, the same manufacturer of Napalm, herbicides, pesticides and genetically modified seeds.

Monsanto developed the rBGH artificial growth hormone by inserting a coded gene into the DNA of the E. coli bacterium. Yes, that is the same E. coli bacteria found in eggs, vegetables and fast foods that has caused injury and death throughout the U.S.

When injected into dairy cows, rBGH induces the cows to artificially increase milk production 10 to15% and in some cases as much as 40%. But the rGBH (like steroids in humans) causes the cows to crave more protein. One of the cheapest protein sources is slaughterhouse waste, which is how rBGH became linked to mad cow disease in the first place. The result is that rGBH makes dairy cows more susceptible to disease...

[Full Article]