December 27, 2024

Brighton Journal

Complete News World

One hundred alumni and alumni of a college had the same brain tumor

One hundred alumni and alumni of a college had the same brain tumor

About a hundred people were involved a School High School, New Jersey United StatesA strange type was created Build Cerebellum. These are alumni and alumni who have been passing the place for more than twenty years. Survivor of the disease undertook a frantic investigation to find out who revealed the situation and the connection between these events and the place of education.

Al Lubiano is one of 94 patients registered so far. In the late 1990s, when he was 27, he was diagnosed with a brain tumor, from which he was able to recover. Last year his wife was said to have a similar type of tumor. On the same day, Allyn’s sister received a carbon-copy diagnosis. All three attended Colonia High School in the Utbridge Township Education District.

Allen’s sister Angela DeSillis passed away in February at the age of 44. In March, the person started a fake book group and asked if there were any people associated with the educational institution that created the brain tumors, and the answer moved him, he says: within six weeks, almost a hundred people were very similar to the pathology. To the victims he was.

The news hit CBS News this week and went national. “I started investigating, 3 cases became 5, 5 became 7, and 7 cases became 15,” Lubiano assured CBS.

Generally, patients who developed brain tumors graduated between 1975 and 2000, but some specific cases were associated with students graduating in 2014. Diagnosis: Different types of brain tumors, such as cleoplastoma (most often) and other non-cancerous nerves, such as hemangioblastomas and meningiomas.

See also  Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky's car crashes at QW: no serious injuries

A TikTok video discussing medical mystery also backed up the issue, which went viral: garnering more than two million views in a single day. In that clip, Dr. Joe Whittington confirmed that the cancer diagnosed in alumni and former workers was generally Cleoplastoma multiforme, an invasive cancer that spreads to brain tissue. According to the American Association of Neurosurgeons, this type of cancer is estimated at 3.21 cases per 100,000 people.

“Primary brain tumors have only one environmental contact, it’s ionizing radiation. It’s not polluted water. It’s not air. It’s not something on the ground. It’s not something caused by bad habits,” Al Lubiano told the American media. “I’m not going to rest until I get the answer. I’m going to find out the truth,” he noted.

Woodbridge Mayor John McCormick argued that something had to be built with the school building. “It could have happened only with the filling brought in during the construction of the institute. But we do not have the records of 55 years ago,” he told CBS.

Louisiana theory? Middlesex Refinery is located 12 miles from Colonia High School. The facility handled, stored, and packaged the uranium ore used by the United States to build the atomic bomb. The alumnus believes that after the closure of the Middlesex plant in 1967, the same year the educational institution was built, the contaminated soil was removed from it. It states that part of these lands contaminated with enriched uranium may have ended up on the company premises.

For now, the case is being investigated by federal and local authorities in New Jersey.

See also  Tensions in Guatemala: Congress resumes session calling for Arevalo's presidency