
Bone Marrow Transplants Save Lives
Submitted by Joe Legge on October 26, 2009 - 11:25am.
News | Health
Comments Below: 2
Comments Below: 2
Hand made soaps. Amy Brooks first made them to battle the effects of chemotherapy and radiation. "Your skin really takes a beating."
The treatment was harsh, but it did seem to deliver the knockout blow to her leukemia. Then about a year later doctors told amy the cancer came back. "I'm like, oh my goodness, can I die? And they're like, absolutely. I was somewhere in that 15% chance survival range."
Amy needed a bone marrow transplant.
"The term bone marrow transplant always brings up the image of someone going into an o.r. And having bone marrow put in. But it's not that. It's actually more like a blood transfusion," says Dr. Dennis Gastineau.
Bone marrow is the spongy tissue inside some bones. It's job is to produce blood cells. To prepare for the transplant, patients have chemotherapy to kill the leukemia and malfunctioning marrow. Then transplanted blood stem cells are put into the blood stream. Ideally the transplanted cells begin producing new, healthy cells.
The cells used for transplantation come from one of three sources: healthy people can donate marrow from their hip bone which requires a surgical procedure - or they can donate blood stem cells. Last, if patients can't find a matching donor, they can be transplanted with stem cells from their own blood. It works if they're healhty enough to go through the collection process before their marrow is wiped out from chemotherapy.
This is what Amy did. In a process called aphersis, a machine removes only stem cells from the blood. What remains goes back in the donor's arm. Amy's transplanted stem cells worked.
Now, eleven years after her bone marrow transplant, Amy's not focused on leukemia, she's focused on her customers.
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New Technique for Bone marrow transplants
Submitted by Bone marrow transplant (not verified) on November 6, 2009 - 12:30am.
Yes now we are able to save more lives today than we were 20 years ago as a result. Vast improvements in the transplant process over the past five years have led to safer transplants. The new technique that saved them promises to make bone marrow transplants far more available than they have been, for people suffering from a variety of serious and potentially fatal diseases. In the long range, bone marrow transplants appear to have greater potential for saving lives than transplants of any major organs such as the heart, kidney or liver.
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Why is it that we as a
Why is it that we as a collective species want to save everybody? Think about this. A bird is born and is deformed and cannot survive on its own. The mother kicks it out of the nest to ensure that the ones that are healthy have the best chance of survival. This also makes the species as a whole more viable by keeping the "bad genes" to a minimum.
Humanity is the only species on the planet that tries it's very hardest to keep those "bad genes" in the mix. We dilute the healthy species by ensuring that those who would have died are not only capable of survival, but also of procreation. We are not doing ourselves any favors here.