• March 29, 2024

Doctors Can’t Explain How Young Girls Inoperable Brain Tumor Vanished

Texas girl’s brain tumor has vanished, but doctors can’t explain why.

 Eleven-year-old Roxli Doss was diagnosed with an inoperable, cancerous brain tumor called diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, or DIPG, but today, she’s horseback riding.

“It is very rare, but when we see it, it is a devastating disease,” said Dr. Virginia Harrod with Dell Children’s Medical Center in Austin, Texas. “You have decreased ability to swallow, sometimes vision loss, decreased ability to talk, eventually difficulty with breathing.”

“At Dell Children’s, Texas Children’s, at Dana-Farber, at John Hopkins, and MD Anderson, all agreed it was DIPG,” the girl’s father confirmed.

However, the family went from facing a no cure scenario to absolutely no trace of the tumor.

Although medical science can’t explain what happened, the family knows exactly what occurred.

They prayed to God for a miracle, and He answered.“She is just as active as she ever was,” said Scott Doss, Roxli’s father.

Harrod recalled that the child underwent weeks of radiation, even though there is no cure.

The family held a benefit for her in August, and the community responded in a big way, with the parents’ only hope in a benevolent, healing God who heard their cries and delivered the miracle.

“And we got it,” Roxli’s mom told reporters about the prayer for a miracle, with her dadadding, “Praise God we did.”

Now, they cry tears of joy.

“When I first saw Roxli’s MRI scan, it was actually unbelievable,” Harrod said. “The tumor is undetectable on the MRI scan, which is really unusual.”

Read more HERE

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