Question:

My 19 yr old daughter recently has been admitted to the hospital and they believe she may have Aplastic Anemia.

We have been waiting 3 weeks for confirmation on this, she had 4 blood tranfusions. This has been a real shock to us

Her hemoglobin was low and her white blood cells were low, her neutrophils were low and her platelets are very low after the transfusions it has come up a bit from 60 hemoglobin to around 90 hemoglobin.

I saw the frequency for Aplastic Anemia in the book for the Rife Digital Professional V2 that came with my Rife Digital.

Would you know how to best use these frequencies, how often? They want to give her a bone marrow transplant.

We are pumping her full of vitamins and trying our best to avoid this if you have any thoughts I would love to hear them.

Answer:

Aplastic anemia is quite a rare condition, so hopefully she may not be diagnosed with this.

Aplastic anemia is a condition that occurs when your body stops producing enough new blood cells. Aplastic anemia leaves you feeling fatigued and with a higher risk of infections and uncontrolled bleeding.

With a Aplastic anemia diagnosis use set:

Anemia, Aplastic: 0.65, 7.50, 2.50, 62.50, 150.00, 319.34, 425.33, 571.00, 823.00, 937.41

For general Anemia diagnosis

Anemia: 0.08, 0.55, 5.97, 23.00, 50.50, 80.50, 97.53, 210.50, 533.21, 909.26

Re: Vitamins: Also look at Iron supplements:

Iron is a mineral that’s necessary for life. Iron plays a key role in the making of red blood cells, which carry oxygen. You can get iron from food and from supplements. If you don’t have enough iron, you may develop anemia, a low level of red blood cells.

Oral iron may be given as tablets or elixirs. Among the tablet preparations, there are non-enteric coated pills and enteric-coated and prolonged-release formulations.

Non-enteric coated iron tablets are most commonly used as initial treatment due to their lower cost. Delayed release and enteric-coated iron preparations have been advocated since they are better tolerated than the non-enteric coated tablets. However, they are less effective since they may contain less iron and their iron may not be released in the duodenum, where iron is absorbed.

In fact, patients who have been treated unsuccessfully with enteric-coated and prolonged-release iron preparations may respond well to the administration of non-enteric-coated ferrous salts.

 

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