HI Perlou... I found a couple of things relating to your question in some sessions:
"What inhabits beings with multiple personalities? Attachments? Several souls? Are they twins at the base? Or what else? Is it true that we can find by X-ray a fetus in the skeleton of these people? Is it the same with babies who are born with surplus limbs or heads?"
multiple personalities/possession/more than one spirit essence in same body:
September 3, 2008
(L) Any other questions before we take a little break here? Oh, can some cases of
multiple personalities be just simply cases of
possession?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) Could some cases of multiple personalities be where
more than one spirit essence resides in the same body?
A: Can be.
Q: (L) So if it’s a case of
possession acting as MPD, then it would be with a
souled person, is that correct?
A: Yes
Q: (Ark) Can these possessions also be divided into souled and non-souled?
A: Not usually.
Q: (A***) Are some cases caused be
extreme trauma or… (L) They already said that was very rare, very difficult.
A: Yes, as you are thinking, but again, it is
difficult and rare.
April 4, 2015
Q: (Galatea) Can a person hold
more than one soul sometimes?
A: Yes
Q: (Galatea) Weird. Does that make people have
multiple personalities sometimes?
A: Sometimes.
Is it true that we can find by X-ray a fetus in the skeleton of these people?
heteropagus or parasitic twins/fetus in fetu ("fetus within fetus")
don't worry, there are no graphic photos... just x-rays, thank goodness (but maybe don't read this while you are eating!)
A teenager in India was discovered to have a bizarre mass of bone, teeth and "hairy cheesy material" in her abdomen, according to a new report of the case.
It was her own "twin" growing inside her, the result of an extremely rare condition called "
fetus in fetu."
The 17-year-old went to the doctor after developing a lump in her abdomen that had been gradually increasing in size over the last five years, according to the report, published Aug. 12 in the journal
BMJ Case Reports. The teen told doctors that she sometimes experienced abdominal pain and a feeling of fullness, even when she had not eaten much food.
It is not clear what causes fetus in fetu. But scientists think the condition is likely a rare case of "
parasitic twins," in which one identical twin is absorbed by the other during early pregnancy, according to
Arizona State University. The tissue of the parasitic twin is dependent upon the body systems of the "host" twin to survive, according to a 2010 review paper on parasitic twins published in the
Journal of Pediatric Surgery.
However, some researchers think that fetus in fetu is actually a kind of
teratoma— a type of tumor that can contain all three of the major cell types that are found in an early-stage human embryo.
At first glance, it may look as if Bhagat had given birth. Actually, Mehta had r
emoved the mutated body of Bhagat's twin brother from his stomach. Bhagat, they discovered, had one of the world's most bizarre medical conditions -- fetus in fetu. It is an extremely rare abnormality that occurs when a fetus gets trapped inside its twin. The trapped fetus can survive as a
parasite even past birth by forming an umbilical cordlike structure that leaches its twin's blood supply until it grows so large that it starts to harm the host, at which point doctors usually intervene.
The condition was described in a British medical journal in 1808 and is thought to occur in about 1 in every 500,000 births. In recent years, similar births have occurred in India, in Indonesia and in Singapore.
The latest case was even more unusual, because doctors clearly identified the fetus-in-fetu during the pregnancy, said Dr. Miguel Parra-Saavedra, a high-risk pregnancy specialist in Baranquilla, Colombia, who oversaw the birth.
He first saw the mother, Monica Vega, when she was in her 35th week of pregnancy, five weeks short of a full-term birth. Her obstetrician believed her fetus had a liver cyst.
But, using color Doppler and 3D/4D ultrasound imaging, Parra-Saavedra was able to see that the fluid-filled space actually
contained a minuscule infant, supported by a separate umbilical cord drawing blood where it connected to the larger twin’s intestine.
On Feb. 22, when Itzamara was at 37 weeks and weighed about 7 pounds, doctors decided to deliver her by cesarean section, because they feared the internal twin would crush her abdominal organs.
Fetus-in-fetu is sometimes misdiagnosed as a teratoma, a tumor that may contain bones, muscle tissue and hair. A DNA comparison is being done, but Parra-Saavedra has no doubt that the fetuses started out as identical twins from the same ovum.
Because the smaller fetus took nourishment from its sibling, it is called a heteropagus or parasitic twin.
Some heteropagus twins are born conjoined to their healthy siblings, while some grow partially inside and partially outside their twin’s body.
The fetus-in-fetu condition is believed to arise soon after the 17th day of gestation, when the embryo flattens out like a disc and then folds in on itself to form the elongated fetus.
Doctors believe that in exceedingly rare cases, the twin embryos only partially divide, and the larger one wraps around the smaller.