A Bone Marrow Transplant Can
Help Restore Hope
A bone marrow transplant is a
procedure that transplants healthy bone marrow into a patient whose bone
marrow is not working properly, usually due to diseases of the blood, bone
marrow, or certain types of cancer. Bone marrow is a spongy tissue found
inside bones, like the breast bone, skull, hips, ribs, and spine. It
contains stem cells that produce the body's blood cells, including
leukocytes or white blood cells, which fight infection, and erythrocytes or
red blood cells, which carry oxygen to and remove waste products from organs
and tissues, and platelets which enable the blood to clot. According to
reliable online sources, bone marrow transplants do not provide 100%
assurance that the disease will not recur, a transplant can increase the
likelihood of a cure, or at least prolong the period of disease-free
survival for many patients.
A bone marrow transplant enables physicians to treat diseases of the blood
and bone marrow with aggressive chemotherapy and/or radiation, by allowing
replacement of the diseased or damaged bone marrow after the treatments are
completed. This procedure uses high doses of chemotherapy and/or radiation
to eradicate the patient’s malignant cell population and return them to
their body, as an autologous donor. The advantages of this method include
lower risk of graft rejection and infection, and no graft-versus-host
disease since donor and recipient are the same individual. Allogenic
involves a donor and recipient whose tissue type matches the recipient’s.
The donor can be a relative, like a sibling, or an unrelated volunteer. The
procedure uses the donor’s umbilical cord blood as the source of stem cells,
and requires the recipient’s own bone marrow to be destroyed prior to the
graft to decrease the possibility of rejection or severe graft-versus-host
disease.
Prior to a bone marrow transplant patients with diseases such as leukemia,
aplastic anemia, sickle-cell disease, lymphoma, and Hodgkin’s may go for
several weeks without adequate numbers of white blood cells, which puts
patient at risk for infection, sepsis, and septic shock despite prophylactic
antibiotics. Immunosuppressive agents further increase the risk of
opportunistic infection, which are used to prevent rejection or
graft-versus-host disease. Transplant patients also lose their acquired
immunity so they must repeat childhood vaccinations like measles, polio,
tetanus, etc. after they have completed treatment with immunosuppressive
medications. For more information on bone marrow transplant, visit the
National Cancer Institute at www.cancer.gov for a fact sheet that explains
the step-by-step procedures of the two types of transplantations used
including the risks and benefits of each.
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