Skip rope is jumping rope. A jump rope, skipping rope, or skip rope is the primary tool used in the game of skipping played by children and many young adults, where one or more participants jump over a rope swung so that it passes under their feet and over their heads.
http://altmedicine.about.com/od/alphalipoicacid/a/alphalipoicacid.htmWhat is Alpha Lipoic Acid?
Other names: lipoic acid, thioctic acid, ALA
Alpha lipoic acid is a fatty acid found naturally inside every cell in the body. It's needed by the body to produce the energy for our body's normal functions. Alpha lipoic acid converts glucose (blood sugar) into energy.
Alpha lipoic acid is also an antioxidant, a substance that neutralizes potentially harmful chemicals called free radicals. What makes alpha lipoic acid unique is that it functions in water and fat, unlike the more common antioxidants vitamins C and E, and it appears to be able to recycle antioxidants such as vitamin C and glutathione after they have been used up. Glutathione is an important antioxidant that helps the body eliminate potentially harmful substances. Alpha lipoic acid increases the formation of glutathione.
Alpha lipoic acid is made by the body and can be found in very small amounts in foods such as spinach, broccoli, peas, Brewer's yeast, brussel sprouts, rice bran, and organ meats. Alpha lipoic acid supplements are available in capsule form at health food stores, some drugstores, and online. For maximum absorption, the supplements should be taken on an empty stomach.
AIHA is autoimmune hemolytic anemia.
http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec14/ch172/ch172f.htmlAutoimmune hemolytic anemia is a group of disorders characterized by a malfunction of the immune system that produces autoantibodies, which attack red blood cells as if they were substances foreign to the body...
There are two main types of autoimmune hemolytic anemia: warm antibody hemolytic anemia and cold antibody hemolytic anemia. In the warm antibody type, the autoantibodies attach to and destroy red blood cells at temperatures equal to or in excess of normal body temperature. In the cold antibody type, the autoantibodies become most active and attack red blood cells only at temperatures well below normal body temperature.
Treatment
If symptoms are mild or if destruction of red blood cells seems to be slowing on its own, no treatment is needed. If red blood cell destruction is increasing, a corticosteroid such as prednisone Some Trade Names
DELTASONE
METICORTEN
is usually the first choice for treatment. High doses are used at first, followed by a gradual reduction of the dose over many weeks or months. When people do not respond to corticosteroids or when the corticosteroid causes intolerable side effects, surgery to remove the spleen (splenectomy) is often the next treatment. The spleen is removed because it is one of the places where antibody-coated red blood cells are destroyed. When destruction of red blood cells persists after removal of the spleen or when surgery cannot be done, immunosuppressive drugs, such as cyclophosphamide Some Trade Names
CYTOXAN
or azathioprine Some Trade Names
IMURAN
, are used.
When red blood cell destruction is severe, blood transfusions are sometimes needed, but they do not treat the cause of the anemia and provide only temporary relief.
We are all familiar with this by the way, as little A has been dealing with the warm autoantibody problem for some time. In the case of little A, his AIHA was brought on by the reaction of his body to some transfused blood. The reason we promote genotyping of blood (even though most centers will not yet do this due to cost...and one wonders how short-sighted this is, because long term correction of this problem is quite costly) is because it is less likely to develop this condition where the body attacks its own red blood cells if the blood is matched to antibodies native to the patient, rather than including the antibodies that are acquired through transfusions, as is done in phenotype testing. In the case of little A, a new treatment has been used. This is probably the first time this has been used in a thal with an autoantibody reaction causing hemolysis, and was the result of a long ongoing discussion between Sharmin and myself on how to treat this issue, after steroid treatment proved ineffective. Once again, we made be a little further along in our understanding than much of the medical profession when it comes to treating thalassemia and its associated problems.
Incidentally, this article mentions the use of cyclophosphamide for extreme cases. I recently posted about a case where cyclophosphamide was used in a two year old with hyperhemolysis whose hemolysis could not be explained by antibody activity. The treatment was successful. (I knew I would soon be referencing that post).
http://www.thalassemiapatientsandfriends.com/index.php?topic=2611.msg24213#msg24213