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Leukemia is cancer that originates in the bone
marrow, the soft, spongy inner portion of certain bones, and
in which the malignant cells are white blood cells (leukocytes).
Leukemia develops when a leukocyte undergoes
a transformation into a malignant cell -- one capable of uncontrolled
growth. Leukemia cells begin to multiply in the marrow, and
as they do so they crowd out the normal blood cells -- those
that carry oxygen to the body's tissues, fight infections,
and help wounds heal by clotting the blood. Leukemia can also
spread from the marrow to other parts of the body, including
the lymph nodes, brain, liver, and spleen.
Leukemia is ten times more common among adults
than among children. Leukemias are evenly split between the
acute and chronic forms, but among children one form -- acute
lymphocytic leukemia -- accounts for about two-thirds of cases.
Acute myeloid leukemia and chronic lymphocytic leukemia are
the most common types in adults.
Blood cell development begins in the marrow with
the formation of stem cells. These primitive cells are capable
of developing into any kind of blood cell. The first step
in this evolution, or differentiation, is into one of two
slightly more mature types of stem cells: lymphocytic progenitor
cells and myeloid progenitor cells. These cells then undergo
further specialization. Lymphocytic stem cells mature into
either T cells, B cells, or natural killer cells. Myeloid
stem cells mature into erythrocytes (red blood cells); platelets
(which clot the blood); monocytes (a type of white blood cell);
or granulocytes (a group of white blood cells that includes
neutrophils, basophils, and eosinophils). Each of these types
of cell has a very specific job in the functioning of the
body.
A malignant transformation can happen at any
stage of blood cell development. The leukemia cells that result
carry many characteristics of the cell from which they began.
Most leukemias fall into one of two general groups: myeloid
leukemia and lymphocytic leukemia. Physicians also classify
leukemias according to whether they are acute or chronic.
In acute leukemias, the malignant cells, or blasts, are immature
cells that are incapable of performing their immune system
functions. The onset of acute leukemias is rapid, and, in
most cases, fatal unless the disease is treated quickly. Chronic
leukemias develop in more mature cells, which can perform
some of their duties but not well. These abnormal cells also
increase at a slower rate, so the disease develops more slowly
than in acute leukemia, and in many cases is more difficult
to cure.
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