Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 > Dear Marilette, > How do you manage to help a commatose patient who > had an ashtma attack and on the way to the hospital > had a cardiac arrest. He is only 22 years old. I > already did what was stated in the book APH and it > seemed stabilized. But I'd like to know what else > can I do to improve his condition. I seemed to > perceived that his travelling on the astral and > seemed reluctant to be back in his body. I > instructed his mother, my friend and all members of > the family to pray and talk to his soul telling him > how much he is loved by the family. His solar > plexus is very much congested as if he has eaten > something that did not agree with his body. > Can you please gave a medical background of his > case. Is it possible for him to have taken some > kind of drug which of course the mother disagree? > > Thank you. > > In Light and In Love, > > JUDY LOU ============================================================== Dear Judy, Namaste. Thank you for your email. Medical Background: When we breathe in, our airways are pulled open as the chest wall gets larger, but when we breathe out, the airways tend to collapse, trapping air in the chest. If you are an asthmatic, emptying the lungs takes a long time because your airways are narrowed. You cannot completely empty the lungs before you have to take another breath. The more short of breath you are, the faster you try to breathe and the less time there is to exhale. The result of this is that the lungs retain, or “trap,” a lot of air. This is called air-trapping, or hyperinflation. This process makes it harder to take another breath in, and your breathing muscles have to work harder to take in any air. A young or otherwise healthy asthmatic can usually overcome this difficulty, but at the cost of significant strain on the breathing muscles. If this demand is sustained too long, for example as a result of resistance to medication, your breathing muscles can fatigue and you will develop respiratory failure. Respiratory failure is characterized by either a reduced oxygen level or an elevated carbon dioxide level in arterial blood. In asthmatic attacks, the decrease in oxygen is usually not too severe, but may cause breathlessness, rapid breathing, and blue lips. In less severe asthmatic attacks, the respiratory rate rises and the carbon dioxide levels are usually lower than normal; this is called hyperventilation. If the carbon dioxide level is high (or even normal) during an asthma attack, it suggests that the respiratory muscles are fatigued and heralds respiratory failure. As the carbon dioxide level rises, you can become confused, sleepy and possibly comatose. The acidity of the blood is also altered, so that many vital organs cannot function normally. The reduced oxygen level in status asthmaticus is easily corrected with nasal, or face mask oxygen. The treatment of an elevated carbon dioxide level, however, usually requires mechanical ventilation. Complications of asthma: respiratory fatigue, pneumothora, death and side effects of the medication used. A probabale cause of coma after a severe asthma attack is anoxia. Anoxia is a condition characterized by an absence of oxygen supply to an organ or a tissue. Anoxia results when oxygen is not being delivered to a part of the body. If the condition does not involve total oxygen deprivation, it is often called hypoxia, although the two terms have been used interchangeably. A related condition, anoxemia, occurs when the blood circulates but contains a below normal amount of oxygen. The five types of anoxia or hypoxia include: hypoxemic, anemic, affinity, stagnant, and histotoxic. -Hypoxemic anoxia happens when the oxygen pressure outside the body is so low that the hemoglobin, the chemical which carries oxygen in the red blood cells (RBCs), is unable to become fully loaded with the gas. This results in too little oxygen reaching the tissues and can occur in suffocation when a person is at high altitude, where the pressure of oxygen in the air is much less than at sea level. -Anemic anoxia results from a decrease in the amount of hemoglobin or RBCs in the blood, which reduces the ability to get oxygen to the tissues. Anemia may result from lack of production of red blood cells (iron deficiency), blood loss (hemorrhage), or shortened lifespan of red blood cells (autoimmune disease). -Affinity anoxia involves a defect in the chemistry of the blood such that the hemoglobin can no longer pick up as much oxygen from the air, even though the quantities are normal, reducing how much is delivered to the tissues. -Stagnant anoxia occurs when there is interference with the blood flow, although the blood and its oxygen-carrying abilities are normal. A common cause of general stagnant anoxia is heart disease or interference with the return of blood flow through the veins. Examples of local stagnant anoxia include exposure to cold, diseases that restrict circulation to the extremities, and ergot poisoning. When the tissue or organ itself has a reduced ability to accept and use the oxygen, it is called histotoxic anoxia. The classic example is cyanide poisoning, where the chemical inactivates a cellular enzyme necessary for the cell to use oxygen. Thus, tissue exposed to cyanide cannot use the oxygen even though it is in normal amounts in the bloodstream. Histotoxic anoxia can also be caused by exposure to narcotics, alcohol, formaldehyde, acetone, toluene, and certain anesthetic agents. Anoxia and hypoxia can be caused by any number of disease states of the blood, lungs, heart and circulation including heart attack, severe asthma, or emphysema. It can also result from smoke or carbon monoxide inhalation, improper exposure to anesthesia, poisoning, strangulation, near-drowning, or high altitude exposure through mountain climbing or travel in an insufficiently pressurized airplane. Anoxia, and the resultant brain damage, is a particular problem with newborns during difficult births. No matter what the cause of anoxia, the symptoms are similar. In severe cases, the patient is often confused and commonly stuperous or comatose (in a state of unconsciousness). Depending on the severity of the injury to the brain, the organ most sensitive to reduced oxygen intake, this condition can persist for hours, days, weeks, or even months or years. Seizures, myoclonic jerks (involuntary muscle spasms or twitches), and neck stiffness are some other symptoms of the anoxic condition. Symptoms of more localized or less complete oxygen deprivation (hypoxia) include increased breathing rate, lightheadedness, dizziness, tingling or warm sensation, sweating, reduced field of vision, sleepiness, a bluish tint to skin, particularly the fingertips and lips, and behavior changes, often an inappropriate sense of euphoria. A good prognosis is dependent on the ability to treat the underlying cause of the low oxygen levels. If cardiovascular and respiratory systems can be supported adequately, recovery from the injury to the tissue is possible, although the extent of injury to the brain can be difficult to assess. The exact amount of recovery varies with the amount of injury sustained, where significant injury brings a poorer prognosis. As recovery occurs, both psychological and neurological abnormalities may appear, persist, and can improve. Some problems seen after anoxia include mental confusion, personality changes, amnesia or other types of memory loss, hallucinations, and persistent myoclonus (involuntary contractions of the muscles). Sources: Dr.Maritza Groth, MD and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,National Institutes of Health Pranic Healing: 1. Invoke and scan before, during and after treatment. 2. General sweeping several times using LWG. 3. Scan the different sections of the brain: front, back, left, right, centre and brain stem. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire head area and the sections of the brain one-by-one alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV. Rescan. Repeat sweeping, if necessary. 4. Localized thorough sweeping on the crown, forehead, ajna, back head minor, jaw minor chakras. Slightly energize the chakras with LWG, LWB and more of ordinary LWV then gold. 5. Localized thorough sweeping on the throat chakra, the secondary throat minor chakra and the lower back part of the back head. Energize them with LWG and more of ordinary LWV. Apply more localized sweeping. 6. Localized thorough sweeping on the lungs alternately with LWG and LWO. Energize directly through the back of the lungs with LWG, LWO then LWR. Point your fingers away from the patient's head when energizing with O. 7. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire spine alternately with LWG and LWV. 8. Localized through sweeping on the front and back heart chakra. Energize the heart chakra through the back heart chakra with LWG then LWR. More experienced proficient advance pranic healers: energize the heart chakra through the back heart chakra with LWG, LWO then LWR. 9. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back solar plexus chakra and the liver. Energize the solar plexus chakra with LWB, LWG, and LWO. Apply more localized sweeping. 10. Localized thorough sweeping on the navel and sex chakras. Energize them with LWR. 11. Rescan the treated chakras to check if they have remained balanced or stable. Repeat treatment, if necessary. 12. Scan the basic and meng mein chakras frontally, and sideways to determine the degree of activation. The meng mein chakra is normally 1/2 to 2/3 the average size of the other major chakras. Do not use too much will for the following. If you are unsure, tone down by using W instead of LWR or LR. 13. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra. Energize the basic chakra with LR. Visualize or will the basic chakra to become brighter and bigger by 2 inches more in diameter. 14. Localized thorough sweeping on the meng mein chakra. Energize the meng mein chakra with LWR or LR. No need to visualize or to will it to make it bigger. Do not overenergize the meng mein chakra. 15. Rescan the basic and meng mein chakras. In case of radical reaction, like pain or vomitting, immediately apply localized sweeping on the basic and meng mein chakras and the affected area until the patient is completely relieved. 16. Stabilize and release projected pranic energy. Source: Advanced Pranic Healing by Master Choa Kok Sui. Recommend : 1. Introduce the family to the daily regular practice of the Meditation on Twin Hearts and blessings. Include the patient in their daily blessings. Meditation and blessings when done as a group increases the energy level exponentially compared to practice by as many persons separately. 2. The OM CD may be played very softly and contineously in the patient's room to assist in the healing process. Love, Marilette Pranic Healing is not intended to replace orthodox medicine, but rather to complement it. If symptoms persist or the ailment is severe, please consult immediately a medical doctor and a Certified Pranic Healer . ~ Master Choa Kok Sui Miracles do not happen in contradiction to nature, but only to that which is known to us in nature. ~ St. Augustine Ask or read the uptodate pranic healing protocols by joining the group through http://health./ For the latest International Information regarding GMCKS Pranic Healing, visit http://www.pranichealing.org. Start your day with - Make it your home page! http://www./r/hs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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