Blood cell formation Flashcards

1
Q

What cells are found in bone marrow stroma?

A

Macrophages, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, fat cells, reticulum cells.

Growth factors and adhesion molecules are important.

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2
Q

What hereditary conditions can impair bone marrow function?

A

Thalassaemia
Sickle cell anaemia
Fanconi anaemia

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3
Q

What acquired conditions can impair bone marrow function?

A
Aplastic anaemia
Leukaemia
Myelodysplastic/proliferative disorders 
Drugs and toxins 
Chemo
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4
Q

What is leukaemogenesis?

A

Dysregulation in cell growth/differentiation (mutation) of a haemopoietic stem cell or an early myeloid/lymphoid cell.

Leukaemic clone proliferates at an early stage, with no more differentiation.

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5
Q

What are autologous STC used for?

A

used in solid tumours

e.g. relapsed Hodgkins, non-Hodgkins, and myeloma

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6
Q

How are autologous stem cells collected for STC?

A

Patient has peripheral HSCs mobilised by giving growth factor (G-CSF) to make stem cells leave bone marrow, and blood is then spun by apheresis to collect stem cells.

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7
Q

What is mozobil?

A

Drug which is used to collect stem cells that have failed to mobilise by stopping them from sticking together.

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8
Q

What are the main indications for allogenic STC?

A

Acute and chronic leukaemias, relapsed lymphoma, aplastic anaemia

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9
Q

How are HSCs collected for allogenic STC?

A

Mobilised in peripheral blood, use bone marrow, or umbilical cord bloood

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