Title: Stem cells
1Stem cells
Stem cells are generic cells that develop into
particular types of cells.
So they may become nerve cells, muscle cells,
blood cells in fact, any cell in the
body! Stem cells divide over and over to
produce new cells.
2Stem cells, bone marrow and blood cells
One of the main places you find stem cells is in
bone marrow. Stem cells in bone marrow produce
new blood cells to replace those that have
died. When the cells are mature they are
released into the bloodstream. A bone marrow
donation is really a donation of stem cells.
Bone marrow is found in the cavities inside the
long and flat bones of the body.
3Leukaemia
- Leukaemia is a form of cancer.
- In the most common forms of leukaemia, one
abnormal white blood cell continuously replicates
(clones) itself. - These abnormal white blood cells do not function
properly - They do not fight infections
- They inhibit the production of other blood cells
and platelets - For some people, a bone marrow transplant can
- be a life-saver.
4Transplants save lives
- Bone marrow transplants not only save the lives
of leukaemia patients. - They can also save the lives of those suffering
from - illnesses where the immune system does not
function properly such as aplastic anaemia
(where the bone marrow stops making enough blood
cells) - rare genetic diseases such as osteopetrosis
(where bones harden and become dense and bone
marrow does not develop properly) - all kinds of cancers(where healthy stem cells
have been damaged during treatments to destroy
cancer cells)
5Stem cell (bone marrow) donation
- There are three ways to collect stem cells from a
donor - Bone marrow A donor has a small operation under
general anesthetic. - Circulating bloodA donors circulating stem
cells are boosted with a special drug. Then they
are connected to a cell separator machine, which
collects the stem cells and returns the rest of
the blood to the donor. - Cord bloodSelected hospitals offer new mothers
the chance to donate the blood that remains in
the placenta and umbilical cord after their
babys birth.
6Advantages / disadvantages for patients
- Advantages
- Cord blood
- hasnt been exposed to environment so less likely
to contain viral infection - requires less stringent matching
- once collected is banked and can be readily
available at short notice. - Bone marrow and circulating blood
- tend to have a greater number of stem cells in
the donation, so tend to be accepted into the
patients body more quickly. - Disadvantages
- Cord blood
- tends to have less stem cells in the donation.
- Bone marrow and circulating blood
- finding a match and arranging a donation can take
weeks, or months (this is time the patient may
not have).
7Finding a match
- A bone marrow donor needs to be a close tissue
type match with the recipient - You can tell what someones tissue type by
testing their blood - Tissue type is inherited but only 30 of donors
are found from within a patients family - Patients are most likely to find a match from
within their own ethnic community - So donors from all ethnic backgrounds are needed