Guest guest Posted September 22, 2003 Report Share Posted September 22, 2003 Dear Krpa,Namaste.Thank you for your email.Medical Background:Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection which in recent years has become a major international public health concern. Dengue is found in tropical and sub-tropical regions around the world, predominantly in urban and semi-urban areas. Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), a potentially lethal complication, was first recognized in the 1950s during the dengue epidemics in the Philippines and Thailand, but today DHF affects most Asian countries and has become a leading cause of hospitalisation and death among children in several of them. There are four distinct, but closely related, viruses that cause dengue. Recovery from infection by one provides lifelong immunity against that serotype but confers only partial and transient protection against subsequent infection by the other three. There is good evidence that sequential infection increases the risk of more serious disease resulting in DHF. The spread of dengue is attributed to expanding geographic distribution of the four dengue viruses and of their mosquito vectors, the most important of which is the predominantly urban species Aedes aegypti. A rapid rise in urban populations is bringing ever greater numbers of people into contact with this vector, especially in areas that are favourable for mosquito breeding, e.g. where household water storage is common and where solid waste disposal services are inadequate.Dengue viruses are transmitted to humans through the bites of infective female Aedes mosquitoes. Mosquitoes generally acquire the virus while feeding on the blood of an infected person. After virus incubation for 8-10 days, an infected mosquito is capable, during probing and blood feeding, of transmitting the virus, to susceptible individuals for the rest of its life. Infected female mosquitoes may also transmit the virus to their offspring by transovarial (via the eggs) transmission, but the role of this in sustaining transmission of virus to humans has not yet been delineated. Humans are the main amplifying host of the virus, although studies have shown that in some parts of the world monkeys may become infected and perhaps serve as a source of virus for uninfected mosquitoes. The virus circulates in the blood of infected humans for two to seven days, at approximately the same time as they have fever; Aedes mosquitoes may acquire the virus when they feed on an individual during this period. Dengue fever is a severe, flu-like illness that affects infants, young children and adults, but seldom causes death. The clinical features of dengue fever vary according to the age of the patient. Infants and young children may have a non-specific febrile illness with rash. Older children and adults may have either a mild febrile syndrome or the classical incapacitating disease with abrupt onset and high fever, severe headache, pain behind the eyes, muscle and joint pains, and rash. Dengue haemorrhagic fever is a potentially deadly complication that is characterized by high fever, haemorrhagic phenomena—often with enlargement of the liver—and in severe cases, circulatory failure. The illness commonly begins with a sudden rise in temperature accompanied by facial flush and other non-specific constitutional symptoms of dengue fever. The fever usually continues for two to seven days and can be as high as 40-41°C, possibly with febrile convulsions and haemorrhagic phenomena. In moderate DHF cases, all signs and symptoms abate after the fever subsides. In severe cases, the patient's condition may suddenly deteriorate after a few days of fever; the temperature drops, followed by signs of circulatory failure, and the patient may rapidly go into a critical state of shock and die within 12-24 hours, or quickly recover following appropriate volume replacement therapy. There is no specific medical treatment for dengue fever.Pranic Healing:1. Invoke and scan before, during and after treatment.2. General sweeping several times.3. Localized thorough sweeping on the lungs: front, sides, top and back of the lungs. Energize the lungs directly through the back of the lungs with LWG then LWO then with ordinary LWV. When energizing with orange, point your fingers away from the patient's head.4. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire spine, the ribs, the arms and legs, the minor chakras of the arms and the legs, the soles of both feet and the palms of the hands. Energize the palms of the hands and the soles of the feet with white or with ordinary LWV. NOTE: If LWV is used, do not repeat step 4 more than once a day. 5. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra. While the patient has fever, do not energize the basic chakra, just aplly thorough sweeping.6. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back spleen chakra and the navel chakra. Energize the navel with LWV.If the spleen is painful, energuze directly with LWG and ordinary LWV. Apply more localized sweeping on the front and back spleen chakra. Avoid over energizing.7. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back solar plexus chakra and the liver.Energize the solar plexus with LWG then LWB, then ordinary LWV.8. Localized thorough sweeping on the throat chakra. Energize with LWB, LWG then ordinary LWV.9. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back heart chakra and the thymus gland. Energize through the back heart chakra using LWG then more of LWV. Visualize the energy going to the thymus and the heart chakra. 10. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire head, the crown, forehead and ajna chakra. Energize the chakras with LWG and then with more of ordinary LWV. While energizing the ajna, instruct the ajna to properly distribute the energy and to normalize and harmonize all the chakras.Stabilize and release projected energy.Repeat treatment several times a day until patient's condition stabilizes. After patient is stabilized, repeat treatment once per day for the next few days or until the patient has sufficiently recovered.Love,Marilette 6. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra, the minor chakras of both arm and legs, the arms and legs, including the soles of the feet and palms of the handsFri, 19 Sep 2003 17:09:33 +0530 ADD India From KrpaDear Master MJ,Greetings of love and light from Bangalore. Thanks you for the reply forthe previous set of questions. I have another urgent question.We are healing a 14 year old girl who is in the ICU in a local hospital.She has been diagnosed as having dengue fever (secondary haemorrhagic).She is losing about 300 to 400 ml of blood on an average every day. Thebleeding stops sometimes, (apparently due to healing). I was told thatthe bleeding happens from the walls of the weakned capillaries. How canwe strengthen the capillaries ?Because clinically there is fever and infection, we are not using redprana on the basic. Most of the time I am doing divine healing, but thisis almost the 12th day. Though she looks `healthy' the bleedingcontinues.I would be grateful for a quick reply.Thanking you and with warm regards.Krpa " Real self-knowledge is the awakening to consciousness of the Divine Nature of Man. " " The eyes of wisdom are like the ocean depths; there is neither joy nor sorrow in them. Therefore the soul of the disciple must become stronger than joy, and greater than sorrow. " ~ Helena Blavatsky 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.