Guest guest Posted August 9, 2005 Report Share Posted August 9, 2005 PHQandA < Thu Jan 27, 2005 2:08 am Lyme's Disease Dear Mary, Namaste. Thank you for your email. Medical Background: Lyme's disease is an illness caused by a spirochete bacteria, Borrelia burgdorferi, which is transmitted to animals and man through the bite of infected ticks. The disease is reported worldwide and throughout the United States. The states of New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and New Jersey account for the majority of cases in the United States. However, cases are reported from all geographic regions of the country. Different ticks are carriers in the different regions. Ixodes dammini (the deer tick) in the Northeast and midwest, Ixodes scapularis (the black-legged tick) in the South, Ixodes pacificus (the western black-legged tick) in the West and Amblyomma americanum (the lone star tick) found in several regions are all considered vectors. The is growing concern that Dermacentor variabilis (the American dog tick) may also be capable of transmitting the disease. Transmission by biting insects (flies, fleas, mosquitos) is speculated but appears to be quite rare. Not all ticks are infected. Infection rates in tick populations vary by tick species and geographic region from as few as two percent to 90 percent or more. Ixodes dammini is responsible for most of the cases of Lyme disease in the northeastern United States. These ticks are found in grassy areas (including lawns), and in brushy, shrubby and woodland sites, even on warm winter days. They prefer areas where some moisture is present. The tick has three life stages: larva, nymph and adult. Each stage takes a single blood meal. They feed on a variety of warm blooded animals including man, dogs, cats, horses and cows. The bite is painless so most victims do not know they have been bitten. The nymphal stage appears to be responsible for most Lyme disease cases. Both the larval stage (about the size of a grain of sand) and nymphal stage (about the size of a poppy seed) attach to a variety of small mammals, but prefer the white-footed mouse, the main reservoir of the Lyme disease bacteria. The adult ticks (about the size of a sesame seed) prefer to feed on white-tailed deer. The entire life cycle requires three separate hosts and takes about two years to complete. Larval and nymphal deer ticks also attach to birds. Birds may be a primary means by which the ticks (some infected) are spread from one area to another. Some species of birds also function as a reservoir of infection. LYME DISEASE SYMPTOMS IN MAN In about 50% of the cases a characteristic rash or lesion called erythema migrans is seen. It begins a few days to a few weeks after the bite of an infected tick. The rash generally looks like an expanding red ring. It is often described as looking like a bull's-eye with alternating light and dark rings. However, it can vary from a reddish blotchy appearance to red throughout. And can be confused with poison ivy, spider or insect bite, or ringworm. At about the same time that the rash develops, flu-like symptoms may appear with headache, sore throat, stiff neck, fever, muscle aches, fatigue and general malaise. Some people develop the flu-like illness without getting a rash. Seek prompt medical attention if any of these symptoms appear, especially after being bitten by a tick or visiting an area where Lyme disease is common. If possible document the presence of the rash by taking a picture because it may disappear before a physician can see it. A picture in this case is worth 10,000 words! If ignored, the early symptoms may disappear, but more serious problems can develop months to years later. The later symptoms of Lyme disease can be quite severe and chronic. -Muscle pain and arthritis, usually of the large joints is common. -Neurological symptoms include meningitis, numbness, tingling, and burning sensations in the extremities, Bell's palsy (loss of control of one or both sides of the face), severe pain and fatigue (often extreme and incapacitating) and depression. -Heart, eye, respiratory and gastrointestinal problems can develop. Symptoms are often intermittent lasting from a few days to several months and sometimes years. Chronic Lyme disease, because of its diverse symptoms, mimics many other diseases and can be difficult to diagnose. Miscarriage, premature births, still births, birth defects and transplacental infection of the fetus have been reported in animals and man. TREATMENT Lyme disease is treated with antibiotics. Timely treatment increases chances of recovery and may lessen the severity of any later symptoms in both animals and man. The most effective treatment will be recommended by your physician or in the case of your animals by your veterinarian and will depend on the stage of the disease. Treatment for later stages is more difficult often requiring extended and repeated courses of antibiotic therapy. In animals and man treatment failures and relapses are reported. While Lyme disease is usually cured with antibiotic treatment, some patients experience persistent fatigue and cognitive dysfunction. Lyme disease has been described in dogs, cats, horses cows and goats. Symptoms in animals can include -fever -lameness and soreness -listlessness -loss of appetite -swollen glands and joints -heart, kidney, liver, eye and nervous system problems are also described in animals. In horses and cows: -poor fertility -abortions and -chronic weight loss. Dogs and horses: Temperament changes -Untreated animals can develop chronic progressive arthritis. Symptoms can be intermittent and vary in intensity from mild to quite severe and can mimic many other conditions. If you suspect Lyme disease in your animals consult your veterinarian as soon as possible. The diagnosis of Lyme disease must generally be made on the basis of clinical signs and by ruling out other possible diseases. Animal ownership does not directly increase a person's risk of Lyme disease. However, allowing your animals to roam in tick habitat or venturing into tick habitat with your animals does increase your risk of exposure to ticks. Lyme disease is not considered to be contagious between people or directly from animals to man. Although some deaths have been attributed to Lyme disease, it is not generally considered to be fatal. Once an animal or person has apparently recovered from the disease it appears to be possible to be reinfected. Pranic Healing: I. Fresh bite: 1. Invoke and scan before, during and after treatment. 2. General sweeping twice. 3. Localized thorough sweeping on the bitten area alternately with LWG and LWO. Do not apply this on the head, near the heart, near the spleen or near them. If the bitten area in located on the head, on the heart, on the spleen chakra or near any of them, apply localized thorough sweeping alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV. 4. Energize the bitten area with G-B(G-30%,B-70%). Do not apply G-B on delicate areas of the body and not on persons below 20 years old or over 45 years old. For delicate areas and for those below 20 or over 45 years old, energize the affected part with LWG, LWB then ordinary LWV. 5. If the infection and inflammation is severe repeat steps 1 to 5, three to four times per day for the next several days or until the condition stabilizes. 6. The frequency of treatment using steps 1 to 5 can be reduced to three times per week when the patient's condition has substantially improved. 7. Localized thorough sweeping on the affected area(s) organ(s) alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV. Energize with LWG, LWB and ordinary LWV. 8. Localized thorough sweeping on the front, sides 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 orange. Step 8 may be reapplied after rescanning after 15 minutes, more than once during treatment. 9. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra. Energize with LWR or white. If the patient has fever or venereal disease, do not energize the basic chakra, just apply thorough localized sweeping on it. 10. Localized thorough localized sweeping on the minor chakras of the arms and legs. Energize them with LWR or ordinary LWV. If the patient has fever or venereal disease, do not energize with LWR, simply use ordinary LWV. If LWV is used, do not apply step 10 more than once per day. 11. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back spleen chakra and on the navel chakra. Energize the navel chakra with ordinary LWV. 12. If the spleen is painful, energize directly the spleen chakra with LWG and ordinary LWV. Apply more localized sweeping on the front and back spleen chkra. 13. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back solar plexus chakra and on the liver. Energize the solar plexus chakra with LWG, LWB and ordinary LWV. 14. Localized thorough sweeping on the throat chakra. Energize it with LWG, LWB, then ordinary LWV. 15. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back heart chakra. Energize through the back heart chakra with LWV. 16. Localized thorough sweeping on the crown chakra, forehead chakra, ajna chakra, and back head minor chakra. Energize them with LWG then woth more of ordinary LWV. 17. Stabilize and release projected pranic energy. Steps 1, 2, 7 to 17 may be applied even if the initial infection has been over some time. 18. Repeat treatment three times per week. Love, Marilette --- Mary Clark <mary wrote: > Dear Marilette > > > > Lyme's Disease is the fastest growing infectious > disease in the United > States, as it is spread by ticks. Could you please > provide a pranic healing > protocol for the treatment of this disease? It has > many different symptoms > that get misdiagnosed and may lay dormant for years > before being activated. > > > > > Thank you for all of your dedicated and selfless > work with the Pranic > Healing Mission. > > > > Mary D. Clark, Ph.D. > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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