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-eng- Raising Funds For Chisa-s Treatment Uncen... Site

To understand the urgency, you have to understand the decay. Yesterday, Chisa lost the ability to hold a spoon. Two days ago, she had a seizure that lasted four minutes. The steroids have given her a "moon face" and brittle bones. She asks her mother the same question every fifteen minutes: "Mama, why are we still here?"

"The thief came at night," Mira says, stroking Chisa’s hair. "One week she was running in the park. The next, she couldn't remember my name."

"The medicine is an angel," she explains, her voice a thin thread of sound. -ENG- Raising funds for Chisa-s treatment Uncen...

Let us not make that angel late.

We are asking for the global community to do what governments and insurance companies will not: to act without a filter. To fund the "Uncen." To understand the urgency, you have to understand the decay

"The 'uncensored' approach here is not pseudoscience. It is frontier science," Dr. Han explains during a video call from the ICU waiting room. "Chisa’s T-cells have become traitors. The CAR-T therapy will re-engineer her own immune cells into assassins that target the rogue B-cells. Then, the monoclonal antibody acts as a 'peacekeeper,' preventing future attacks. In an adult, this is aggressive. In a child, it is revolutionary. But we cannot move forward without the funds. The lab requires a 50% deposit just to culture her cells."

Outside Chisa’s window, the city is waking up. Cars honk. Children laugh on their way to school. Life goes on, brutally indifferent. The steroids have given her a "moon face" and brittle bones

In a small, sunlit room covered in crayon drawings of dinosaurs and smiling flowers, a six-year-old girl named Chisa is fighting a battle no child should ever have to face. Her laugh, which once echoed through the hallways of her home, is now a whisper. Her fingers, once busy weaving friendship bracelets, now lie still against sterile hospital sheets.