Introduction
In healthy individuals, the number of precursor (-blast) cells in the bone marrow stays at a normal range (since cells maturate and new -blast cells are formed).
- In acute leukemias, precursor cells (-blasts) lose the ability to maturate, and these cells start proliferating and pile up in the bone marrow
- This may affect hematopoiesis and cause cytopenia (cell number decrease in the blood) of other cell lineages (thrombocytopenia, anemia, leukopenia)
- The patient may present with symptoms that fit one of the cytopenia types (bleeding, hypoxia, or infections)
- Precursor cells usually reach the circulation
- They will seem polymorphic: larger, with and a big, pale nucleolus
- This may result in an increased count of the specific cell lineage
- Acute leukemias have a sudden