malignant bone disorders Flashcards
1
Q
describe leukaemia
A
- proliferation of immature WBCs in bone marrow (haematopoietic stem cells)
- expand and replace normal marrow cells
- abnormal cells spill over into blood
2
Q
pathogenesis
A
- congenital/inherited risk factors (trisomy 21)
- viral infections
- radiation, chemicals, DNA damaging drugs
3
Q
presentation
A
anaemia = fatigue, dysponea, pale
neutropenia = infections, wounds slow to heal
thrombocytopenia = bleeding, bruising
organ infiltration = bone pain, enlarged liver, spleen, lymph nodes
4
Q
diagnose results
A
full blood count
- low Hb
- high WBCs but low neutrophils
- low platelets
bone marrow biopsy
- aspirate
- trephine
specialised testing (ALL vs AML)
- immunophenotype
- chromosomes
- molecular studies
5
Q
general therapy
A
- intensive transfusion of red cells, platelets
- management of infection
- tunnelled line for vascular access
- patient and family support
6
Q
chemotherapy (cytotoxic drug therapy)
A
- induction therapy = to reduce remission
- consolidation = to mop up residual leukaemia cells
- maintenance therapy = to keep patients in remission (only ALL)
7
Q
haematopoietic stem cell transplantation
A
autologous = own stem cells taken in remission
allogeneic = matched siblings or unrelated donor
cells is from marrow, peripheral blood or umbilical cord blood
8
Q
describe trephine/biopsy compared to aspirate
A
- maintains the architecture of the bone.
- aspirate sucks out fragments of marrow and smears them onto a glass slide