Wednesday, December 4, 2019
Leukemia Essays (2273 words) - RTT, Acute Myeloid Leukemia
  Leukemia    According to the Cancer Book from the American Cancer Society, Leukemia is a  cancer of the blood. It was first identified as a new disease in around 1830 in    Germany. The scientific term, "leukemia," comes from the Greek words  that mean "white blood." The disease is described as a cancerous  disorder not just of the blood itself, but also of the organs that produce the  blood cells in the body. The organs are mainly the bone marrow and the lymph  system, where normal red and white cells, lymph cells, and platelets grow before  entering the bloodstream. Normal cells usually go through the same process but  with differences in rate, number, and function ability. With the disease, the  bone marrow will not be able to produce the sufficient levels of red blood cells  and platelets, while the white blood cells will produce so rapidly that the  cells will not become mature enough to fight off infections. As the disease  progresses, the whole blood system will become useless due to the vast amount of  immature cells produced. If a person with the disease is not treated, there will  be excessive bleeding and infections until the body reaches the point where it  becomes defenseless. The body will make minor injury or infection very serious.    Leukemia itself does not always kill people. Instead, people die from infections  such as small virus or bacteria because there are not enough normal white blood  cells in the body. Also, people could die form internal bleeding, which could  have been prevented by the platelets. Leukemia appears more commonly in adults  then children. A survey in 1989 stated that approximately 25,000 new cases of  the disease are diagnosed annually in the United States, 22,500 of them are  adults and only 2,500 are children. It also shows that men are affected by  leukemia 30 percent more frequently than women. Ten years ago, about 17,000  people die from the disease each year. Many of the advanced industrial nations  have increased the study of leukemia since the 1930s. In the Personal Health    Report, the information stated that there are two major types are leukemia:  "Lymphocytic leukemia which involves lymphoid committed cells which form  and mature in the lymphatic system, and granulocytic leukemia which affects  myeloid committed cells which form and mature in the bone marrow" (355).    Each of the two types can occur in either acute or chronic form. Acute form  usually affects young cells that are still in the process of growing; they can  divide very quickly and may speed the progress of the disease. The chronic form  involves the mature cells that reproduce in a low rate or the ones that have  stopped dividing. According to the Home Medical Guide, acute lymphocytic  leukemia is most commonly seen in children between the age of two and nine. In  this type of leukemia, males are affected more frequently than females. Before  treatment was available, the average survival rate is only 5 to 6 months. As  treatment developed, more then 95 percent of all children are putted into  complete remission. Both adult and childhood disease can be cured in around four  years, and the therapy can be discontinued. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia is the  most common form of cancer found in the industrialized countries. Like acute  lymphocytic, it occurs more frequently in males then in females. The patients  that are affected by chronic lymphocytic leukemia are usually older then any  other patients with different types of leukemia. The cause of this specific type  of disease is still unknown: Strong evidence points to problems of function and  control in the immune system diagnosis is very often discovered by accident in  the course of routine blood testing for other medical reasons, since fully 25 to    30 percent of newly diagnosed patients have no symptoms...the degree of bone  marrow infiltration by small lymphocytes is a much more accurate sign of degree  of disease. (452) According to the Home Medical Guide, acute granulocytic  leukemia usually occur in older ages: "The typical patient is thirty to  sixty years old, the frequency of the disease increasing with age. The natural  course of untreated this disease leads to an average survival of only two to  five months" (451). With chemotherapy, the survival rate can be lengthened  to about 5 years. Around 75 percent of the patient can be cured with a complete  remission. This type of leukemia can cause heart attacks and strokes by blocking  the arteries: "It is treated by removing large numbers of white cells from  the patient's blood and increasing the intensity of the chemotherapy"(453).    Over 50 percent    
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