Leukemia Review
 
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Quiz Please

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)

Just like many other tissues of the body, there can be dysplasia of the bone marrow. You know, dysplastic maturation of the cervical epithelium, bronchial mucosa, etc. You can have abnormal maturation of the bone marrow that may lead to overt malignancy.

  • Myelodysplastic syndromes are a heterogeneous group of clonal stem cell disorders.
  • Because the problem is with the multipotential stem cell, all cell lines (erythroid, granulocytic and megakaryocytic) coming from the diseased stem cell are sick too.
  • The maturation defect of the multipotential stem cell leads to
    • ineffective hematopoiesis, plus
    • confers an increased risk advancing to overt AML
  • The bone marrow of patients with MDS is partly or wholly replaced by the clonal proliferation from the mutant stem cell. This leads to a paradoxical histology:
    • hyperplastic bone marrow (it's really not doing its job)
    • peripheral blood shows pancytopenia (ineffective maturation)
The basic pattern of MDS.                                                       Back

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