Sunday, June 25, 2006

leukemia symptoms : Acute myelogenous leukemia

symptoms result from the body not producing enough healthy blood cells. Healthy bone marrow makes stem cells that grow into the three types of blood cells: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. An AML patient's bone marrow makes too many blast cells (immature white blood cells). Normal blast cells turn into a type of white blood cell called granulocytes, but the leukemia blast cells do not. At the same time, the marrow cannot grow enough normal red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.

Someone with too few red blood cells (anemia) may:

· Feel tired
· Be short of breath
· Look pale

Someone with too few normal white blood cells and too many leukemia blast cells may:

· Develop a lot of infections, for example, a sore throat
· Experience pain in the bones or joints
· Have a mild fever

Someone with too few platelets may:

· Bleed easily, such as swollen and bleeding gums, frequent nose bleeds or cuts that bleed for a long time
· Bruise more easily than usual
· Develop pin-head sized spots under the skin
· Develop cuts that heal slowly or do not heal

Some people with AML, however, do not notice any symptoms. Their AML may be discovered only during a blood test.

by Nielsen Technical Services





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