Tag: anaemia

  • FIIRO unveils product to manage sickle cell anaemia, others

    FIIRO unveils product to manage sickle cell anaemia, others

    The Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO), Lagos has manufactured a product that will not only help fight malnutrition, but also manage sickle cell anaemia, its Director-General/Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Prof. Gloria Elemo, has said.

    She made this known during  FIIRO Day at the Technology and Innovation Week in Abuja.

    She said the product, Nutrocituca, is made from legumes and other local raw materials. It has been tested with children living with sickle cell disease and has been effective, she added.

    To tackle malnutrition, she said FIIRO manufactured some biscuits  that met the recommended dietary  needs of children from five to 12, adding that NASCO Biscuits is mass- producing them for the market.

    She said: “We are showing the automation of process technology and indigenous technologies that have been developed. We have the automation of the kunu plant, where you can have kunu that can stay off the shelf without refrigeration for about two years. It has export potential. We have automated it. So also is Zobo.

    “Our initiative is that all our processed technology will be automated to industrial large scale. It can be handled from the small scale, medium and large scale.

    “If you produce and you are unable to process for optimum utilisation, then you would have been making a mockery of agriculture. We play a core part in the agricultural value chain. We have R&D results that can handle all the agricultural raw materials, even waste management of agricultural products.

    “We have over 250 technologies that are ready for uptake. These are not those that are still coming up. This year and last year alone, we have about 20 patents registered in the name of FIIRO. We are working and ready to move this country from being a third world country to an industrialised one. Even in using casava alone, the casava value chain alone, in FIIRO, we have over 25 products for industrial development.

    “We have a large number of industrialists here, May and Baker, NASCO, and Honeywell that are our collaborators. The biscuits we are talking about meets one third of the recommended dietary allowance for children between ages five and 12, that is, we are totally eradicating and preventing malnutrition, we are looking at both macro and the micro nutrients, thus is the first time thag a pack of biscuits and snacks will have such high nutrients. It took about four years for development, all circles of Research and Development (R and D) have been done on it and NASCO biscuits in Jos has taken up the technology and today it is ready for full blast production.

    “We also have other products like Nutrocituca for the management of sickel cell anaemia, they are just two legumes, all Nigerian based raw materials and from our clinical studies and all the R and D results we have shown, we have been very successful, none of the children involved in clinical studies have actually gone into crises and May and Baker is here today and us also taking up such technology.”

  • Some faces of anaemia and their solutions

    A woman in her 70s anxious about the health of her husband asked me last week: “why is he anemic when his haemoglobin level is normal?” By haemoglobin she had iron in mind. Many of us associate the blood with nothing but iron. And that’s possibly why we are a nation of iron hill gobblers. The blood is red, so are iron pills! We are not too far from the truth, though, because iron plays a critical role in blood formation and maintenance, although there is more to the blood than just iron.

    Yes, one can be anaemic when one’s haemoglobin level is high. Haemoglobin is a protein molecule in red blood cells which carries oxygen from the lungs to all cells of the body and transports carbon dioxide, a waste product of their metabolism, from them back to the lungs for excretion.

    Haemoglobin is a component of the red blood cell. Its structure of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen is bound together by a central atom, iron, which gives the red blood cell its red colour through the haemoglobin.

    Thus, we can picture the red blood cell as a transport vehicle which bears the haemoglobin as passenger. The shape and number of red blood cells in the blood account for whether a person is anaemic or not. Red blood cells may be too small in size (microcytic), normal-sized (normocytic) or oversized (macrocytic).

    Microcytic anaemia is caused more by iron deficiency. In macrocytic anaemia, a major cause is pernicious anaemia and alcoholism. There may be a problem in the stomach or in the intestine which disturbs or inhibits the absorption of Vitamin B12. Many old or aging people suffer from Macrocytic anaemia and, for this reason, the health industry has developed a sublingual form of Vitamin B12. This is placed under the tongue and is directly absorbed from there into the bloodstream. It works wonders!

    Even where the red blood cell is of normal shape and haemoglobin is reasonably high, anaemia may occur if the red blood count is low. In this condition, there would be fever transport vehicles to ferry haemoglobin and oxygen to the cells and remove poisonous carbon dioxide. Such an anaemic person would be tired always and may experience fogginess in the brain. The condition will, therefore, require an investigation of what may be amiss.

     

    Menstruation

    There are many things which may be amiss either as individual or single factors or as combination factors. First, menstruating women lose blood every month. If they do not eat right, including vitamins and minerals in their diet, they may gradually suffer from low red blood count. For nutrition is one of the factors which helps us to hedge off anaemia.

     

    Kidneys

    The health of the kidneys is also important if we are to live an anaemia-free life. The red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow of the femur, that is the thigh bone, and in the pelvic bones.

    These production sites are helped to produce these cells by a secretion from the kidneys called erythropoietin. That means that, without erythropoietin, the red blood count would be low. Do not be surprised, therefore, if you visit a doctor complaining about tiredness or weakness which your blood tests suggest is anaemia-related and he asks you to run a kidney function test. For anaemia is not a disease in itself, but a symptom of a disease which may include kidney disease or even a cancer.

    Many people have chronic kidney disease without knowing that they do, especially because they do not run routine kidney function tests or take food supplements which help to clean up the kidney filters regularly. The kidneys are like the fuel filters of a motor vehicle. They do become clogged up with wastes. And, although they have a self-cleaning mechanism, they fare better with help from the diet which should supply cleaning factors or agents.

    Traditionally, the kidneys benefit from the small flowered willow herb which shrinks enlarged prostate and has a tonic effect on the kidneys as well. There is also Bell’s Kidney cleanse and Function Tea. Dandelion and Stinging Nettle add their own pep as well to the kidney cleanse treasure trove. Chanka piedra crushes kidney stones. Amazing KD-CL prevents and crushes kidney stones. We cannot forget that great herb Cilantro and, of course, Asparagus and the Red Kidney Bean Pod. Asparagus has been reported often to be so high in Glutathione, one of the body’s leading natural antioxidant that it is believed to kill cancer cells.

    In an earlier column on Asparagus, I wrote: “…it has been linked with many health benefits which include fertility, relief from premenstrual syndrome, cancer, diabetes, hang-overs, cataract, rheumatism, tuberculosis, depression, neuro-degenerative diseases and convulsions…”

    As for Red Kidney Bean pod, it has had a centuries-long reputation for helping to resolve bad kidney conditions which cause water-logging, and relief for hearts troubled by this condition.

     

    Malaria

    Malaria fever damages red blood cells. Falciparum, the culprit malaria fever parasite, targets them for destruction. People who bear the AA gene in particular are traumatised by anaemia of this origin. But, happily, falciparum is easily destroyed by the water extract of Lemon grass, according to studies by the University of Lagos College of Medicine and the Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO). The good news is that, today in Nigeria, Lemon grass is now available in powder form, no longer as leaf cuttings. The powder can be used as tea or added to foods such as pap, rice, beans, porridge e.t.c. Apart from its anti-malaria effects, Lemon grass is also an immune boosting herb. Europeans know about this and are wise enough to include it in products such as Spectragreen or Superior Greens, a warehouse of the powders of about 42 green plants.

     

    Bleeding

    Many people lose blood through internal bleeding without knowing they do. Such bleeding may come from stomach (peptic) or duodenal ulcer, intestinal ulcer (occult bleeding), internal piles, polyps, diverticula or cancers in any part of the body. Some women bleed so heavily from uterine fibroids and endometriosis. They almost have no energy left for anything. Such people may help their conditions through the use of astringent herbs such as the Touch Me Not (Mimosa Pudica) plant, Apple Cider Vinegar, Stinging Nettle or iron and blood replenishers as Jobelyn, Stinging Nettle, Beet root, Blood Root.

     

    Nutrients

    The quality of the food we eat is closely related to the quality of our blood. The average red blood cell lives for about 100days. It is important that, as they expire and are broken down, they are replaced, otherwise a shortfall may occur. The red blood cell requires anti-oxidant protection to enable it live to ripe old age as it were. Vitamin E provides such protection. But many diets are deficient in Vitamin E. These days, vegetable oils dominate the oil intake, and the more the vegetable oil consumption, the more the amount of Vitamin E required to protect these oils as well against deterioration. People who exercise vigorously need more Vitamin E than moderate exercisers. And when it comes to buying Vitamin E, many people can hardly tell their right arm from the left. They go for cheap brands which are usually derived from petroleum residues. These are the dl-alpha tocopherol brands. The natural brand is the d-alpha tocopherol brand. Note the difference…there is no l after the d in natural Vitamin E. Even natural Vitamin E splits into four groups…alpha, beta, delta and gama. They are all tocopherols and are better when the supplement E contains them all as mixed tocopherols.

     

    Diabetes

    Elevated blood sugar or diabetes on its own does not appear to cause anaemia. It is the complications it brings about that do. At least three of the complications forment this trouble. Diabetes damages the kidneys, sometimes causing kidney or renal failure. As already stated, a diseased kidney may be unable to produce adequate amounts of erythropoietin and this may make the bone marrow to be unable to produce enough red blood cells. Secondly, diabetes damages the nerves as well! Red blood cells are produced on the basis of need or demand. Demand or need is signalled or communicated to the bone marrow through nerve impulses or flow. When the nerves are damaged, they can hardly pick signals or transmit them. Thus, they may become incommunicado. Thirdly, some anti-diabetic drugs are known to interfere with red blood cell production if they are taken over a prolonged period of time.

     

    Drugs

    Some pharmaceutical drugs endanger the mechanism for red blood cell production. Towards the end of the 1980s or early 1990s, one of my Juniors at Olivet Baptist High School, Oyo, in the 1960s died of the complications caused by the use of such drugs. He was a vocal, nationalistic Nigerian who worked with a French-owned company in Lagos. The French did not like his mien and, so, transferred him to Maiduguri, at the opposite end of the Nigerian map, to “ool” him off. He came to Lagos about two times a month to see his young family that he left behind. On one of those travels back home, he drove his car into a ditch and was seriously injured. Fluid built up in his lungs. He was admitted to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) at Idi-Araba. In the wisdom of his doctors, he was given the drug Chloranphenecol. The drug was said to have caused him bone marrow problems from which he did not recover. He could not produce enough red blood cells to support his life. In the end, he could not produce any. This condition is called aplastic anaemia, and the end result is death.

    Since his death, I have approached pharmaceutical drugs with caution, nay, fear. I feel sorry for many Nigerians who know next to nothing about them, or who do not ask their doctors for the side effects of their prescription drugs. They do not know that, because doctors know of the negative sides of these drugs, they seldom take them. It is worse for those Nigerians who find that the prescriptions of their doctors work for them but do not return to these doctors for re-fills. To cut off consultation fees from their health bills, these ignorant Nigerians patronise the road-side drugs kiosks, not even pharmacies. Here, they may buy fake drugs, expired drugs or functional drugs of dosages different from their doctor’s. To worsen matters, these drugs may not be used in conjunction with other drugs the doctor may have previously prescribed, or they may be used for longer than is desirable and safe. And when their ignorance begins to take its toll, and they are becoming tired from tired blood or low blood count, they reach out for iron-leased blood tonics when iron-deficiency anaemia may not be their primary problem. Thus, increased iron load in the body causes a high ferratin load, pains all over the body and possible liver damage.

     

    Candida

    Fungal and yeast-like, this parasite inhabits various parts of the body as a part or member of the natural flora or family. It inhabits the mouth and the throat, the intestine and, in women, the vagina. Friendly bacteria prevent candida from overgrowing its own population to the detriment of its host. But certain situations encourage it to expand the colony. One of these is the obsessive consumption of pharmaceutical drugs. These drugs kill the friendly bacteria, thereby giving candida the right of way to expand its colony. The consumption of refined sugar, elevation of blood sugar as in diabetes and a diet overloaded with carbohydrates, among many other scenarios, support candida overgrowth. This situation is the origin in some cases of many of the intestinal and other health challenges prevalent in Nigeria today. Where candida succeeds in damaging the protective lining of the intestine and crossing into the bloodstream, it may settle in any organ. Where many organs are involved, a condition known as systemic candidiasis may arise. The organs become sick, tired and devitalised. If they suffer an injury and candida hides in this, a cancer may be on the way. Some doctors have written books suggesting that “cancer is a fungus”. In the brain, candida may cause fogginess, insomnia, mental disorders, mood swings and so on.

    When candida-infested blood is examined under the dark field microscope,  the presentation is frightening. Cordinarily, uninfected blood presents a full spectrum reddish landscape. In the infected blood, there is a presentation of white patches interspersing the reddish topography. The red blood cells are not moving energetically. They are weak, almost moribund. In a blood check, doctors talk about haemoglobin and hematocrit. Hematocrit is the percentage of red blood cells in the blood specimen. In candida infestation, the hematocrit percentage is below normal. This equates a condition of anaemia. To restore normalcy, the overgrown candida population must be brought within normal bounds and the hematocrit expanded or regrown. Many herbs help to kill candida. The ones often mentioned in this column include Golden Seal root, Pawpaw leaf extract, Mango seed extract, Oregano, Grape seed extract, Black Walnut hull, Aloe vera, Kyolic garlic etc. A proprietary blent I have found very reliable is AMAZON A-F. It warehouses some Amazon forest herbs well researched clinically for their anti-fungal and anti-candida activities. As a candida-infested blood or tissue is often found to be de-oxygenated, the use of oxygen tablets or other oxygenating agents is suggested. The green herbs have oxygen in their molecular structure which should help. Jobelyn, arguably Nigeria’s most studied herbal blood formula, has proven itself to be one of the world’s, if not the world’s only fasted grower of the hematocrit. It has demonstrated in many studies that it can do the job from the first 24 hours of its ingestion.

     

    Sickle cell

    Arguably, this is where anaemia is most easily evident. The sickle cell challenged person is off the tracks when bitten by mosquitoes. Malaria fever steps in easily. Free radicals, too, easily have a free day, damaging red blood cells that are not picking up and transporting adequate amounts of oxygen in the first place. These cells do not live for more than 50 or 60days or half their lifespans if left alone, unprotected. Vitamin E offers helpful protection. So do other antioxidants such as Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Selenium, Zinc and Manganese. Selenium and Vitamin E work like cousins. A decade or so ago in Nigeria, we enjoyed the benefit of Selen-E, a combination of Selenium and Vitamin E supplement from Schiff in Europe. Zinc helps to fence off heavy metals harassment of sickle and normal red blood cells. Yarrow, a resolver of female problems, is one of the herbs most friendly with the bone marrow.

    So much more is tied to haemoglobin, blood count, anaemia…and all that, that only a blood specialist, an haematologist, would be able to give us a bird’s eye view of it all. For me, the lesson I have learned is to consume as much of the healthy greens as I can. Obeying the command of Mother Nature, they have encapsulated for us everything that is required to form haemoglobin. Four scientists won a Nobel Prize for discovering that the Chlorophyll of the green of the plant and the haemoglobin have the same structure…Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen and Oxygen except that Magnesium binds this structure in Chlorophyll whereas Iron binds it in haemoglobin. So, when we eat or drink green, we recharge our blood. For the body simply removes the Magnesium in Chlorophyll and replaces it with iron. I will ever remember that article in this column long ago titled…Let’s drink green…the earth is not green for the fun of it.

  • Knorr launches campaign against anaemia

    Knorr, produced by Unilever Nigeria, has launched a campaign called Knorr Social Mission.

    It is aimed at improving the lives of Nigerians, with a special focus on teenage girls and promoting maternal health to help reduce the prevalence of iron deficiency Anaemia in Nigeria.

    The campaign is a demonstration of the brand’s fight against iron deficiency Anaemia through its unique culture of good nutrition targeted at making nutritious meals a priority, easy to achieve and more desirable.

    According to a statement from the company, Knorr is propagating the Knorr social mission tagged ‘Green Food Steps’ with its brand ambassadors, Omotola Jalade Ekeinde and her daughter, Meraiah.

    The Green Food Steps encourages mothers to toss leafy green vegetables into their stew, stir it all together and crumble in iron-enriched Knorr cubes to achieve a tasty, nutritious and iron rich Knorr Stew for healthy living.

    Brand Building Director Foods, Unilever Nigeria, Mrs. Nsima Ogedi-Alakwe, said the campaign was part of Unilever’s commitment to bringing the United Nations’global goals to life through its Knorr social mission.

    Mrs Ogedi-Alakwe said: “Through our social mission campaign, Knorr is championing the fight against iron deficiency, giving hope to two billion people worldwide who suffer from micronutrient deficiencies.’’

    She added: “The Green Food Steps campaign is part of the brand’s social mission to improve the quality of life through healthy nutrition by getting Nigerian mothers who are the cooks of today, and teens, the cooks of tomorrow, to adopt simple cooking behaviours the Knorr Way, and enrich the nutritional value of their weekly meals.

    “The quick steps showcase that it is easy for people to effectively change their cooking habits without compromising on flavour, time, or cost.

    “Knorr is helping to improve health and livelihoods of Nigerian women, teaching them to cook more iron-rich meals and creating a #BrightFuture by following three simple Green Food steps – Toss, stir and crumble,” she added.

    Iron deficiency is the most common cause of anaemia among women and young adults and eating food with too little iron over an extended period of time can actually cause iron shortage in the body. Reports say that in Nigeria, almost one in two women of reproductive age are anaemic and 50 per cent of these cases are caused by iron deficiency.

  • Sickle cell anaemia

    Sickle Cell Anaemia is a genetic disorder that is brought about right from the time the individual is being formed in the womb. It occurs in a baby who is a product of a couple that are both of the AS and/or SS Blood group.

    Sickle cell disease is a common disorder occurring exclusively in the black race. This hereditary disease causes the production of an abnormal type of haemoglobin by the bone marrow. The abnormal haemoglobin differs from the normal by a small change in the structure of the molecules.

    Red cells with this type of haemoglobin form sickle or crescent shapes (like saucers) when subjected to lowered oxygen concentrations. The cells do not pass through the same blood vessels readily, and may block the blood supply to vital areas.

    Among the symptoms to be encountered in Sickle-cell disease is sudden abdominal pain followed by the appearance of dark-coloured urine. It often begins with an inner restlessness and a feeling of general discomfort. This is followed by pains in the bones and joints which become more severe over a period of days. Some times, a swollen foot is observed. Also associated with Sickle cell disease is leg cramps, acute pain in the left side and a yellowish discoloration to the eyes (i.e. Jaundice).

    In the severest cases, slight exercise may bring on the pain. There may be severe anaemia, a huge liver, repeated fevers and recurrent bone pain. A bone in the leg may crack, which can cause a child who had been walking not to be able to walk. Sometimes, cuts that are sustained by sicklers can be quite difficult to heal, just like in diabetes. Patients with Sickle-cell disease easily succumb to other infections. The crises can be as frequent as every two months, lasting for 2 to 8 days.

     

    Prevention

    The only way of preventing this genetic problem is for couples intending to marry to ascertain each other’s blood group. If their combination will produce SS and they are not ready to go through the strain of caring for an SS child, they should not attempt to marry.

    For the management and control of Sickle Cell, a highly nutritious diet, rich in proteins and Folic acid is very essential. Folic acid is found mainly in leafy green vegetables. It is very important to adhere to natural foods, and not over-processed or denatured food like white flour products. These should be avoided. Milk, meat, soft drinks and highly proteinous foods should be cut off the diet. No sugar should be taken. Instead, honey is a very good substitute.

     

    Treatment

    The Holistic Lifecare remedies suggested for Sickle Cell Anaemia include natural extracts of local herbal plants such as Aloe vera, Morinda lucida, Zanthoxylum zanthoxyloides. Also recommended is auto-urine therapy.

    For further information and consultation on Holistic Lifecare research and services, especially on Blood Infections, Infertility, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Chronic Debilitating Conditions as well as mental and social problems, please call  on: 0803-330-3897 or visit: Mosebolatan Holistic Lifecare Centre, Adeyalo Layout, Ogbere-Tioya, Off Olorunsogo Express Bridge, Ibadan. Website: www.holisticlifecare.com. Distance is no barrier, we can send remedies by courier if need be.

  • Why many women suffer anaemia, by nutritionists

    The figures are scary-49 per cent of women of reproductive age have anaemia, 24.3 per cent,  low iron supplies and 12.7 per cent  are iron deficient. Nigeria has the largest case of micro-nutrient deficiencies in the world, with anaemia as the most common.

    This is  the statistics, according to the Nutrition Society of Nigeria (NSN).

    The figures speak volumes  about  women’s and children’s health. “Majority of adolescent girls and women did not meet the iron requirements of 20 milligrams per day as recommended by the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Health Organisation (WHO)”, NSN said.

    According to its President, Prof Ngozi Nnam, iron deficiency anaemia is a condition in which the red blood cells or their oxygen-carrying capacity is insufficient to meet physiological needs of the body. The symptoms of anaemic condition include, fatigue, dizziness, weakness, drowsiness, shortages of breath and all these militate against active living and human productivity as iron is critical to learning process and energy for day-to-day activities. Iron is one of the most prevalent micronutrient deficiencies globally, with almost one of every two women of reproductive age being anemic in Nigeria.”

    Speaking at a press conference in Lagos organised by Unilever Nigeria in partnership with NSN on the impact of iron deficiency anaemia in Nigeria, Prof Nnam said the causes of anaemia vary, adding that approximately 50 percent of the cases are due to iron deficiency.

    Speaking on a survey findings commissioned by Unilever Nigeria focusing on iron deficiency anaemia among women in Nigeria, Dr Folake Samuel, of the University of Ibadan said the preliminary research findings show that although many Nigerian women are aware that there are rich iron sources of food around us  with  their benefits; they are as well aware of   the consequences of iron deficiencies,and a lot of them consume iron rich food. Despite all  these, the consumption of iron rich food is still low and this calls for action and intervention.

    As a result, a significant proportion of the women frequently experience various symptoms of iron deficiency, Dr Folake said quoting the report.

    The survey sampled 615 women aged 20 to 45 years in Lagos to access their level of awareness on iron deficiencies, iron rich food and consequences of iron deficiencies.

    “Looking at the awareness level of symptoms of iron deficiency, 55 per cent of the women rated tiredness and fatigue as part of daily life and know that when you suddenly become dizzy out of the blues, it is the consequences of not eating enough iron rich food; pale complexion, being another symptom of anaemia is also common in our society. Some people mistake a woman being pale for pregnancy, not knowing that it is an indicator of being anaemic,” she said.

    Professor Ngozi Nnam added that adolescent girls and pregnant women are the segment requiring the highest amount of iron intake and are, therefore, most susceptible to iron, adding that the typical Nigerian diet is low in iron-rich foods, while cassava and cereals (high in phytates which decreases iron absorption) are commonly eaten staples.

    Pregnant women, teenage girls and women of reproductive age are among the most vulnerable to iron deficiency anaemia because of high iron requirements. Increasing iron intake during adolescence to prepare for pregnancy is crucial to decreasing the risk of iron deficiency anaemia and negative birth outcomes.

    “The commonly consumed traditional dishes may not provide sufficient iron to meet the requirements and it may be a challenge to manipulate these recipes as they are passed down from generation to generation.  In Nigeria, mothers are the kitchen ‘gatekeepers’ and their adolescent daughters learn cooking behaviours from them,” she said.

    Hygiene and Nutrition Social Mission Director, Africa, Unilever, Myriam Sidibe, said the aim of the programme was to provide more sensitisation to the general public on the importance of iron nutrients to the health of individuals.

    She said that women and children were the group of people more vulnerable to anaemia.

    ‘’These issues are common among our women and teenage girls and these people are the bedrock and foundation of the home and family which is the unit of the nation.

    ‘’These are the critical people in the society and their health is important to nation building; we need to take care of these people,” she said.

  • Sickle cell anaemia

    Sickle cell anaemia

    Sickle Cell Anaemia is a genetic disorder that is brought about right from the time the individual is being formed in the womb. It occurs in a baby who is a product of a couple that are both of the AS and/or SS Blood group.

    Sickle cell disease is a common disorder occurring exclusively in the black race. This hereditary disease causes the production of an abnormal type of haemoglobin by the bone marrow. The abnormal haemoglobin differs from the normal by a small change in the structure of the molecules.

    Red cells with this type of haemoglobin form sickle or crescent shapes (like saucers) when subjected to lowered oxygen concentrations. The cells do not pass through the same blood vessels readily, and may block the blood supply to vital areas.

    Among the symptoms to be encountered in Sickle-cell disease is sudden abdominal pain followed by the appearance of dark-coloured urine. It often begins with an inner restlessness and a feeling of general discomfort. This is followed by pains in the bones and joints which become more severe over a period of days. Some times, a swollen foot is observed. Also associated with Sickle cell disease is leg cramps, acute pain in the left side and a yellowish discoloration to the eyes (i.e. jaundice).

    In the severest cases, slight exercise may bring on the pain. There may be severe anaemia, a huge liver, repeated fevers and recurrent bone pain. A bone in the leg may crack, which can cause a child who had been walking not to be able to walk. Sometimes, cuts that are sustained by sicklers can be quite difficult to heal, just like in diabetes. Patients with Sickle-cell disease easily succumb to other infections. The crises can be as frequent as every two months, lasting for 2 to 8 days.

    Prevention

    The only way of preventing this genetic problem is for couples intending to marry to ascertain each other’s blood group. If their combination will produce SS and they are not ready to go through the strain of caring for an SS child, they should not attempt to marry.

    For the management and control of Sickle Cell, a highly nutritious diet, rich in proteins and Folic acid is very essential. Folic acid is found mainly in leafy green vegetables. It is very important to adhere to natural foods, and not over-processed or denatured food like white flour products. These should be avoided. Milk, meat, soft drinks and highly proteinous foods should be cut off the diet. No sugar should be taken. Instead, honey is a very good substitute.

    Treatment

    The Holistic Lifecare remedies suggested for Sickle Cell Anaemia include natural extracts of local herbal plants such as Aloe vera, Morinda lucida, Zanthoxylum zanthoxyloides. Also recommended is auto-urine therapy.

     

    For further information and consultation on Holistic Lifecare research and services, especially on Blood Infections, Infertility, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Chronic Debilitating Conditions as well as mental and social problems, please call  on: 0803-330-3897 or visit: Mosebolatan Holistic Lifecare Centre, Adeyalo Layout, Ogbere-Tioya, Off Olorunsogo Express Bridge, Ibadan. Website: www.holisticlifecare.com. Distance is no barrier, we can send remedies by courier if need be.

  • ‘Traditional medicine can stop anaemia, others’

    ‘Traditional medicine can stop anaemia, others’

    A traditional medicine practitioner has recommended okan, known botanically as Cylicodiscus gabunensis or African greenheart and sorghum bicolor for the management of anaemia and other diseases, such as cancer and HIV.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Health Forever Product Limited, Olajuwon Okubena, said conventional medicine across the world has not found an effective solution to anemia.

    He said this is despite the fact that the problem of blood appears to be central to many aspects of healthcare.

    Okubena said blood is very critical to the treatment of cancer and HIV.

    “The conventional system of chemotherapy for cancer and anti-retroviral drugs for HIV destroys the blood cells to the extent that blood transfusion becomes inevitable for the survival of the patient”.

    He said most popular drugs used in the United States by doctors to boost hematocrit (blood volume) of patients have a lot of side effects, such as seizure, hypertension. This, he said, was despite the fact that they could only achieve less than five per cent increase in blood level over a period of more than four weeks.

    Besides, it is also expensive and the method of administration through intravenous system makes it unaffordable for the ordinary people.

    He said African Traditional Medicine (ATM) is rich in plants that have been in use in medicine for anemia without problems.

    “Plants such as cylicodiscus gabunensis and Sorghum bicolor are notable examples.

    He said blood transfusion, which is the process of transferring blood or blood-based products from one person into the circulatory system of another, may not be necessary when anaemic people are treated with preparations from natural plants.

    He said blood transfusion has its benefits, such as life-saving because of massive blood loss due to trauma, or as replacement for blood lost during surgery.

    It may also be used to treat a severe anaemia or thrombocytopenia caused by a blood disease, he added.

    “People suffering from hemophilia or sickle-cell disease may require frequent blood transfusions.

    “Early transfusions used whole blood, but modern medical practice uses only components of the blood,” he said.

    Okubena, however, said objections to blood transfusions sometimes arise from personal, medical, or religious reasons.

    Some people object to blood transfusion primarily on religious grounds that blood is sacred and should not be shared.

    Moreover, there are possible complications associated with transfusion.

    “Apart from emergencies arising from trauma and blood loss during surgery, there is no need for the senseless transfusions that have become rampant in our healthcare delivery system,” he said.

    Why? He said the dangers in blood transfusion are many.

    Okubena said there is a transfusion transmitted infection (TTI), which can be a virus, parasite, or other potential pathogen that can be transmitted in donated blood through a transfusion to a recipient.

    “The term is usually limited to known pathogens, but sometimes includes agents such as Simian foamy virus which are not known to cause disease,” he said.

    He said rigorous screening is usually carried out on known diseases for blood kept in blood banks in the developed countries, adding: “The USA authorities said there is no 100 per cent guarantee of safety for such screened blood. The developing countries are very much disadvantaged for lack of necessary equipment to do thorough screening and the numbers of pathogens being screened are by far limited.

    “If great care is not taken in cross-matching the recipient’s immune system will attack the donor blood.

    Moreover, a number of infectious diseases (such as HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B and hepatitis C, among others) can be passed from the donor to recipient.

    He said sorghum bicolor leaves have been in use in in the management of anaemia for several decades in many parts of South Western Nigeria.

    Also, there are several publications by authors in Nigeria and other parts of the world resulting from research work done in the laboratories.

    He said a herbal medicine called Jobelyn, which is made from Sorghum bicolor leaf sheaths, provided evidence of its efficacy for anaemia.

    The herbal drug is recommended in most of the government hospitals in Lagos State for the treatment of anaemia resulting from dialysis.

    “Most dialysis patients receive blood transfusion after the exercise to replace blood lost in the process but many of the patients using Jobelyn are able to avoid transfusion after dialysis.

    A Briton whose child was to be transfused with blood before a kidney operation as a result of anaemia said the herbal drug proved to be a life saving product.

  • How to treat anaemia

    AnAemia is a condition in which the red blood cell count or hemoglobin is less than normal. The normal level of hemoglobin is generally different in males and females. For men, anemia is typically defined as hemoglobin level of less than 13.5 gram/100 ml and in women as hemoglobin of less than 12.0 gram/100 ml. These definitions may vary slightly depending on the source and the laboratory reference used.

    Anaemia is caused by either a decrease in production of red blood cells or hemoglobin, or an increase in loss or destruction of red blood cells.

    Some patients with anaemia have no symptoms. Others may feel tired, easily fatigued, appear pale, a feeling of heart racing, short of breath, and/or worsening of heart problems.

    Anaemia can be detected by a simple blood test called a complete blood cell count (CBC).

    The treatment of the anemia varies greatly and very much depends on the particular cause.

    What causes anaemia?

    Any process that can disrupt the normal life span of a red blood cell may cause anemia. Normal life span of a red blood cell is typically around 120 days. Red blood cells are made in the bone marrow.

    Herbs for treating anaemia

    Herbal preparation made from red seeds, sorghum bicolor (poroporo baba), cocoa bark (epo koko) and other medicinal leaves can enhance the blood production of an anaemic person.

    Causes

    Anaemia is caused essentially through two basic pathways. Anaemia is caused by either a decrease in production of red blood cells or hemoglobin, or an increase in loss or destruction of red blood cells.

    A more common classification of anaemia (low hemoglobin) is based on the mean corposcular volume (MCV) which signifies the average volume of individual red blood cells.

    If the MCV is low (less than 80), the anemia is categorised as microcytic anaemia (low cell volume).

    If the MCV is high, then it is called a macrocytic anaemia (large cell volume).

    Looking at each of the components of a complete blood count (CBC), especially the MCV, a physician can gather clues as to what could be the most common reason for anaemia in each patient.

    Can inadequate iron cause anemia?

    Absolutely! As a matter of fact, iron deficiency is a very common cause of anaemia.

  • ‘Preventive therapy will reduce maternal anaemia’

    A Professor of paediatrics at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Olugbenga Mokuolu has said the use sulfaxodine-pyrimethamine by expectant mothers will help reduce maternal anaemia.

    According to him, the therapy will also reduce delivery of low birth weight babies and prevent malaria in infants.

    Prof Mokuolu spoke in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital at the 114th inaugural lecture of UNILORIN. The lecture was entitled: “Saving the innocent from unsolicited encounters: The worm as a sharp threshing instrument.” Mukuolu whose contributions to the study of malaria in children has won international recognition said the use of low cost technologies and care strategies are important panacea for reducing neonatal deaths in Nigeria. “Some of these include the recycle incubation technique, use of oxygen concentrators, and fabricated radiant heaters among others”, he said.

    He urged the Federal Government to facilitate the scale up of some of these technologies and make them available at secondary and primary levels of health care as a means of further improving access to quality health care.