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leukaemia |
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leukaemia![]() Syringes are used to harvest bone marrow from the pelvis of a donor prior to transplantation into a patient with leukaemia. Bone marrow is rich in blood-forming and immune system cells. Donated bone marrow can be used to save the lives of patients whose own marrow cells have been destroyed by the chemotherapy and radiotherapy needed to eradicate their cancers. Any one of a group of cancers of the blood cells, with widespread involvement of the bone marrow and other blood-forming tissue. The central feature of leukaemia is runaway production of white blood cells that are immature or in some way abnormal. These rogue cells, which lack the defensive capacity of healthy white cells, overwhelm the normal ones, leaving the victim vulnerable to infection. Treatment is with radiotherapy and cytotoxic drugs to suppress replication of abnormal cells, or by bone-marrow transplantation. Abnormal functioning of the bone marrow also suppresses production of red blood cells and blood platelets, resulting in anaemia and a failure of the blood to clot. Leukaemias are classified into acute or chronic, depending on their known rates of progression. They are also grouped according to the type of white cell involved.
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01); b) an increase in lymphomas and leukemias with a positive significant trend in both males (p [less than or equal to] 0. The artificial sweetener aspartame (Nutra-Sweet, Equal) caused lymphomas (cancers of the lymph system) and leukemias (cancers of the blood-forming cells) in female--but not male--rats, according to a large Italian study. The drugs inhibit a single enzyme, and "they presumably won't work for other leukemias. |
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