Guest guest Posted February 11, 2005 Report Share Posted February 11, 2005 Do any of you have any ideas about natural treatments for this, particularly for someone who is very resistant to non-orthodox dietary and medical ideas? We don't yet know anything more than the count, which is about 1/3 of the bottom end of the " normal " range, and since " normal " is often defined much too widely, at least on the low end, this is quite alarming. Supposedly there are just two basic categories: an autoimmune reaction against the platelets themselves, or some kind of bone marrow disorder causing a drop in the production of platelets. Lupus and leukemia are both possible causes. The conventional therapy, at least as described here http://www.diagnose-me.com/cond/C271923.html sounds particularly alarming, except possibly for the last option, which no doubt isn't widely available, particularly for those who don't have the money to doctor-shop. >Conventional Treatment > >Treatment is often aimed at inhibiting the immune system with >corticosteroids such as prednisone. Because the spleen filters the >platelet-immune complex it may be necessary to remove it in order to >reduce the production of anti-platelet antibodies and slow the clearance >of platelets from the system. In some people, however, more platelets are >destroyed in the liver than in the spleen and in this case removing the >spleen is less likely to result in remission. Note that after the spleen >has been removed and the platelet levels elevated, the liver can take over >the removal function and the platelet count can drop again. > >The acute manifestation can usually be controlled by a course of therapy >using steroids to inhibit the immune response for a period of several >weeks. Chronic autoimmune thrombocytopenia develops in a small percentage >of patients. In that case, steroid therapy eventually fails (due to the >side-effects from prolonged administration). Until recently, the main >therapy for chronic autoimmune thrombocytopenia has been splenectomy, >which is sometimes curative and at the very least reduces the disease severity. > >More recently, intravenous infusion of normal IgG to replace the body's >anti-platelet IgG has been tried with some success and may replace >splenectomy for some patients. This has also been proposed as an >alternative to the initial therapy with prednisone. Other therapies are >also being developed. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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