Guest guest Posted June 4, 2001 Report Share Posted June 4, 2001 Dear Master Fe Greetings of love and light! I need your advice for a pranic healing treatment. It is a 23 month old boy with a PFAPA-syndrom. A syndrom involving periodic high fever, pharyngitis, adenitis and aphthous stomatitis. It is described in 8 children in Switzerland. Attacks are characterized by abrupt onset of fever and, in addition to the above symptoms, by malaise, headache and abdominal pain. Mild leukoctosis and elevation of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate are found in the laboratory. The cause remains unknown. No evidence linking bacterial, viral, or fungal pathogens to this syndrom has been found. All three weeks he gets this attacks for about 3-5 days. Love and Light Susan---- Dear Susan, Greetings. MEDICAL INFORMATION: PFAPA SYNDROME " Periodic fevers (fevers that occur predictably at fixed intervals) are unusual in infants and children. The classic periodic fever syndrome is cyclic neutropenia (neutropenia followed by infections and fever that recur every 21 days). A new periodic fever syndrome PFAPA (periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis) has been characterized over the past decade. PFAPA is defined clinically, because specific laboratory abnormalities have not been found. The clinical characteristic of PFAPA is high fevers (usually 40.0 degrees C to 40.6 degrees C) recurring at fixed intervals every 2 to 8 weeks. The fevers last for about 4 days, then resolve spontaneously. Associated with the fevers are aphthous stomatitis in 70% of patients, pharyngitis in 72% of patients, and cervical adenitis in 88% of patients. PFAPA is not familial and begins before the age of 5 years. The episodes of PFAPA may last for years and the patient is well between episodes. The cause of PFAPA is unknown and there are no reported sequelae. PFAPA is a not uncommon cause of periodic fever in children. In some children the syndrome resolves, whereas symptoms in others persist. Long-term sequelae do not develop. The syndrome is easily diagnosed when regularly recurring episodes of fever are associated with aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, or cervical adenitis. Without a known cause or a confirmatory test, diagnosis is appropriately restricted to typical cases. Such cases are both dramatic and unique in a sea of children evaluated in primary and referral care because of “recurrent fevers” or because they are “sick all the time.” Two cardinal features are both required and discriminatory. The first is that episodes have clockwork periodicity (usual interval <4 weeks), unheralded onset (except when a keenly observant parent notes a few hours of lassitude), and brisk rise to high fever (>39°C) that is sustained over 3 to 6 days and is unaccompanied by remarkable respiratory tract or other symptomatology. Chills are common; but rigors, drenching sweats, and myalgia or arthralgia are not features. The child’s preserved sense of well-being at 40°C is notable. The second feature is the child’s complete wellness between episodes. Appetite and energy are normal, lost weight is regained, and growth and development progress. Children with PFAPA are not “sick all the time,” and their parents usually do not see them as such. When fever abates, they declare themselves well and are at the top of their game. They are quite different from that larger group evaluated because of chronic or recurring low-grade fever and nonspecific “dwindles,” who tend to be older and have respiratory tract symptomatology (sometimes with frank allergic signs or symptoms), chronic absenteeism from school, and a persistent “down” feeling and whose family dynamics are frequently unusual. Children with PFAPA and their parents are uncommonly cheerful and focused on wellness. " PRANIC HEALING TREATMENT: (The pranic healing protocol for fever outlined in the Advanced Pranic Healing book by GMCKS is also applied for enhancing the body's defense system.) 1. General sweeping with LWG, then with LWB several times. 2. Sweep the front and back solar plexus and the liver. Energize the front solar plexus with LWG, then with a lot of LWB. 3. Energize the front solar plexus with LWO. Do not appy this step if patient is suffering from loose bowel movement or intestinal bleeding. 4. Sweep the front and back heart chakra. Energize the back heart with LWG, then with more of LWV. 5. Sweep the left and right lungs. Energize the back heart DIRECTLY through the back of the lungs with LWG, then with LWO. 6. Sweep front and back spleen. 7. Cleanse the lower abdominal area and the navel chakra. Energize the navel chakra with LWG, LWB, then with LWV. (Don't use LWG if patient has intestinal bleeding.) 8. Sweep the basic chakra. 9. Sweep the hand and sole chakras. Energize them with LWV. (Do this step maximum of ONCE a day.) 10. Sweep the crown, forehead, ajna, back head minor, jaw minor, and throat chakras. Energize with LWG, LWB, then LWV. 11. With infants and children, just use WHITE PRANA for the entire treatment. General sweeping should be emphasized. Energizing should be done gently and gradually. 12. Repeat treatment 2 to 3 times a day. 13. If fever is quite high or recurrent, cleanse thoroughly the basic chakra and energize slightly with LWB. Do this with care since temperature may drop temporarily to a little below normal level. 14. Stabilize and release. 15. APPLY THIS PRANIC HEALING TREATMENT AT LEAST 2 - 3X A WEEK FOR THE NEXT 6 MONTHS. Love and light, masterfe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.