Leukemia
Leukemia is
the most common type of cancer kids get, but it is still very rare. Leukemia
involves the blood and blood-forming organs, such as the bone marrow.{{U}}
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A kid with leukemia produces lots of abnormal
white blood cells in the bone marrow. Usually, white blood cells fight
infection, but the white blood cells in a person with leukemia don't work the
way they're supposed to.{{U}} (47) {{/U}}The abnormal white blood
cells multiply out of control, filling the bone marrow and making it hard for
enough normal, infection-fighting white blood cells to form. Other blood
cells—such as red blood cells (that carry oxygen in the blood to the body's
tissues) and platelets (that allow blood to clot)—are also crowded out by the
white blood cells of leukemia. These cancer cells may also move to other parts
of the body, including the bloodstream, where they continue to multiply and
build up.
Although leukemia can make kids sick, most of the time
it is treatable, and kids get better. Almost all leukemia patients are treated
with chemotherapy, which means using anti-cancer drugs. {{U}} (48)
{{/U}}Chemotherapy quickly goes to work, traveling through the blood to the bone
marrow. There, the drugs can attack the cancer cells. After several weeks of
chemotherapy, many kids begin to feel better.
Some children with
leukemia will also have radiation therapy, too.{{U}} (49)
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If the cancer isn't getting better from usual amounts of
chemotherapy and radiation, then a kid with leukemia Will probably need more
treatment—with higher doses of chemotherapy and radiation to finally kill the
cancer cells. But this heavy-duty treatment will also harm the normal cells in
the kid's bone marrow too, and the bone marrow will no longer be able to produce
normal blood ceils. So, doctors will then give a kid—or anyone else with bone
marrow that is no longer working—normal bone marrow tissue from someone else who
is healthy.{{U}} (50) {{/U}}
A. The chemotherapy drugs
are given through a catheter, a narrow tube that is inserted into a blood
vessel, sometimes in the kid's upper chest.
B. Early symptoms of
leukemia are often overlooked, since they may resemble symptoms of the flu or
other common diseases.
C. This is a special procedure called a
bone marrow transplant, and it helps the patient make new blood cells so they
can recover from the leukemia.
D. Bone marrow is the innermost
part of some bones where blood ceils are first made.
E. They
don't protect the person from infections very well.
F. Radiation
therapy uses invisible high-energy waves (similar to X-rays) to kill cancerous
cells.