Guest guest Posted July 12, 2007 Report Share Posted July 12, 2007 Dear Marilette, Atma Namaste Please can you kindly send me the protocol for healing Super Nuclear Palsy which is like Parkinson's disease but different. Thanking You Warm Regards Monica ======================================== Dear Monica, Atma namaste. Thank you for your email. Medical Background: Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a rare brain disorder that causes serious and permanent problems with control of gait and balance. The most obvious sign of the disease is an inability to aim the eyes properly, which occurs because of lesions in the area of the brain that coordinates eye movements. Some patients describe this effect as a blurring. PSP patients often show alterations of mood and behavior, including depression and apathy as well as progressive mild dementia. The disorder's long name indicates that the disease begins slowly and continues to get worse (progressive), and causes weakness (palsy) by damaging certain parts of the brain above pea-sized structures called nuclei that control eye movements (supranuclear). PSP was first described as a distinct disorder in 1964, when three scientists published a paper that distinguished the condition from Parkinson's disease. It is sometimes referred to as dementia-nuchal dystonia, or as Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome, reflecting the combined names of the scientists who defined the disorder. Although PSP gets progressively worse, no one dies from PSP itself. PSP is much less common than Parkinson's disease. Patients are usually middle-aged or elderly, and men are affected more often than women. PSP is often difficult to diagnose because its symptoms can be very much like those of other, more common movement disorders, and because some of the most characteristic symptoms may develop late or not at all. SYMPTOMS: The most frequent first symptom of PSP is a loss of balance while walking. Patients may have unexplained falls or a stiffness and awkwardness in gait. Sometimes the falls are described by the person experiencing them as attacks of dizziness. This often prompts suspicion of an inner ear problem. Other common early symptoms are changes in personality such as a loss of interest in ordinary pleasurable activities or increased irritability, cantankerousness, and forgetfulness. Patients may suddenly laugh or cry for no apparent reason, they may be apathetic, or they may have occasional angry outbursts, also for no apparent reason. It must be emphasized that the pattern of signs and symptoms can be quite different from person to person. As the disease progresses, most patients will begin to develop a blurring of vision and problems controlling eye movement. In fact, eye problems usually offer the first definitive clue that PSP is the proper diagnosis. PSP patients have trouble voluntarily shifting their gaze downward, and also can have trouble controlling their eyelids. This can lead to involuntary closing of the eyes, prolonged or infrequent blinking, or difficulty in opening the eyes. Another common visual problem is an inability to maintain eye contact during a conversation. This can give the mistaken impression that the patient is hostile or uninterested. Speech usually becomes slurred and swallowing solid foods or liquids can be difficult. In rare cases, some patients will notice shaking of the hands. CAUSE: We know that the symptoms of PSP are caused by a gradual deterioration of brain cells in a few tiny but important places at the base of the brain, in the region called the brainstem. One of these areas, the substantia nigra, is also affected in Parkinson's disease, and damage to this region of the brain accounts for the motor symptoms that PSP and Parkinson's have in common. Scientists do not know what causes these brain cells to degenerate. There is no evidence that PSP is contagious, and genetic factors have not been implicated in most patients. No ethnic or racial groups have been affected more often than any others, and PSP is no more likely to occur in some geographic areas than in others. THEORIES: There are, however, several theories about PSP's cause. One possibility is that an unconventional virus-like agent infects the body and takes years or decades to start producing visible effects. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is one disease known to be caused by such an agent. Another possibility is that random genetic mutations, of the kind that occur in all of us all the time, happen to occur in particular cells or certain genes, in just the right combination to injure these cells. A third possibility is that there is exposure to some unknown chemical in the food, air, or water which slowly damages certain vulnerable areas of the brain. This theory stems from a clue found on the Pacific island of Guam, where a common neurological disease occurring only there and on a few neighboring islands shares some of the characteristics of PSP, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease). Its cause is thought to be a dietary factor or toxic substance found only in that area. Another possible cause of PSP is cellular damage caused by free radicals, reactive molecules produced continuously by all cells during normal metabolism. Although the body has built-in mechanisms for clearing free radicals from the system, scientists suspect that, under certain circumstances, free radicals can react with and damage other molecules. A great deal of research is directed at understanding the role of free radical damage in human diseases. Initial complaints in PSP are typically vague and an early diagnosis is always difficult. The primary complaints fall into these categories: 1) symptoms of dysequilibrium, such as unsteady walking or abrupt and unexplained falls without loss of consciousness; 2) visual complaints, including blurred vision, difficulties in looking up or down, double vision, light sensitivity, burning eyes, or other eye trouble; 3) slurred speech; and 4) various mental complaints such as slowness of thought, impaired memory, personality changes, and changes in mood. PSP is often misdiagnosed because some of its symptoms are very much like those of Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, and more rare neurodegenerative disorders, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In fact, PSP is most often misdiagnosed as Parkinson's disease early in the course of the illness. Memory problems and personality changes may also lead a physician to mistake PSP for depression, or even attribute symptoms to some form of dementia. The key to diagnosing PSP is identifying early gait instability and difficulty moving the eyes, the hallmark of the disease, as well as ruling out other similar disorders, some of which are treatable. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PSP and PARKINSON'S DISEASE Both PSP and Parkinson's disease cause stiffness, movement difficulties, and clumsiness. - However, patients with PSP usually stand straight or occasionally even tilt their heads backward (and tend to fall backward), while those with Parkinson's disease usually bend forward. - Problems with speech and swallowing are much more common and severe in PSP than in Parkinson's disease, and tend to show up earlier in the course of the disease. Both diseases share other features: onset in late middle age, bradykinesia (slow movement), and rigidity of muscles. Tremor, almost universal in Parkinson's patients, is rare in PSP. Although Parkinson's patients markedly benefit from the drug levodopa, patients with PSP respond poorly and only transiently to this drug. PROGNOSIS PSP gets progressively worse but is not itself directly life-threatening. It does, however, predispose patients to serious complications such as pneumonia secondary to difficulty in swallowing (dysphagia). The most common complications are choking and pneumonia, head injury, and fractures caused by falls. The most common cause of death is pneumonia. With good attention to medical and nutritional needs, it is possible for most PSP patients to live a decade or more after the first symptoms of the disease. Source - " Progressive Supranuclear Palsy Fact Sheet, " NINDS. NIH Publication No. 04-3997 Prepared by: Office of Communications and Public Liaison National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke National Institutes of Health Pranic Healing: As with any severe disease, treatment requires a lot of pranic energy. The Pranic Healer has to be relatively powerful and be properly prepared prior to each healing treatment in order not to get depleted. 1. Invoke and scan before, during and after treatment. 2. Play the Meditation on Twin Hearts CD and ask the patient to follow the guided meditation during treatment. 3. Advanced general sweeping with LWG several times. 4. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire head, the different sections of the brain with EV. Rescan. Continue sweeping until the energy of all the sections are clean and stable. 5. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire spine and both sides of the spine alternately with LWG, LWO and ordinary LWV. Do not apply O near the head area or beyond the neck. 6. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra alternately with LWG and LWO 50 to 100 times. Energize with LWR. 7. Localized thorough sweeping on the meng mein chakra. 8. Localized thorough sweeping on the sex and navel chakras. Energize with LWR. 9. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back solar plexus chakra and the liver alternately with LWG and LWO. Energize the solar plexus chakra with LWG, LWO then ordinary LWV. 10. Localized thorough sweeping on the front, sides, bottom and back of the lungs. Energize through the back of the lungs with LWG, LWO then ordinary LWV. Point your fingers away from the patient's head when energizing with O. 11. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back heart chakra. Energize through the back heart with LWG then with more of ordinary LWV. 12. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back spleen chakra. Energize the spleen chakra with W. This has to be done with caution. 13. Localized thorough sweeping on the base of the hwead minor chakra, the throat chakra, secondary throat minor chakra and jaw minor chakras alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV. Rescan. Continue sweeping until the chakras' energies are clean and stable. Energize them with LEV. 14. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire head, the crown chakra, forehead chakra, ajna chakra, and back head minor chakra alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV. Rescan. Continue sweeping until the chakras' energy are clean and stable. Energize the chakras with LEV or EV. 15. Localized thorough sweeping on the arms and legs and their minor chakras alternately with LWG and LWO. Energize the minor chakras with LWR. 16. Teach the patient how to do Superbrain Yoga properly facing north. Instruct the patient to do 14 to 21 cycles under your supervision. 17. Rescan the treated chakras and all sections of the brain after Superbrain Yoga. If the energy has reverted to dirty or diseased, re apply treatment on any affected chakra(s) or area(s) of the brain until all are clean and stable. 18. Stabilize and release projected energy. 19. Repeat entire treatment once a day for the first several weeks until there is substantial improvement and the condition is stable based on scanning. Gradually reduce frequency of treatment to 3 times a week for at least 6 to 12 months or for as long as necessary. 20. For the patient: a.) Do 21 cycles per session of Superbrain Yoga properly, 1 to 3 sessions a day, everyday. This is to energize and activate the brain and nerve cells; balance the different areas of the brain. b.) Practice the Meditation on Twin Hearts everyday to energize the brain cells, to cleanse and energize the entire energy body to a certain degree, to promote general well being, and to generate good karma through blessing. c.) Eat nutritionally balanced healthy fresh clean food and drink sufficient amounts of fresh water daily. A vegetarian diet composed of fresh vegetables and fresh fruits is highly recommended. Avoid junk foiod and food with artificial food enhancers and food colorings. d.) Do light physical exercise for 15 minutes or more everyday. e.) Tithe for healing. f.) Practice Forgiveness and Mercy for others and for yourself in order to receive divine forgiveness and mercy or healing. Love, Marilette Source: MASTER CHOA KOK SUI - Miracles Through Pranic Healing, Advanced Pranic Healing, Pranic Psychotherapy, Pranic Crystal Healing. PHQANDA and its contents are copyrighted by the Institute for Inner Studies, Inc.(IISI). Downloading, reproducing or copying in any manner or form, in part or as a whole, is prohibited without expressed written permission from IISI. Exception is given for single copy made for personal use only and when a brief passage or quotation is reproduced within proper context, without alteration and with proper acknowledgment. NOTICE: 1. Pranic Healing is not intended to replace orthodox medicine, but rather to complement it. If symptoms persist or if the ailment is severe, please consult immediately a medical doctor and a Certified Pranic Healer. 2. Pranic Healers who are are not medical doctors should not prescribe nor interfere with prescribed medications and/or medical treatments. ~ Master Choa Kok Sui MCKS Pranic Healing website: http://www.pranichealing.org. ______________________________\ ____ Be a better Heartthrob. Get better relationship answers from someone who knows. Answers - Check it out. http://answers./dir/?link=list & sid=396545433 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shahul_ham_eed Posted January 13, 2012 Report Share Posted January 13, 2012 Does this treatment has a positive results for PSP?? Could some one recommend on the same..? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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