I Am Doing An Essay On Children With Cancer, More Focused On Leukemia?

I Am Doing An Essay On Leukemia In Children, And I Need To Have In The Essay, A Account Of Someone Who Has Had/Or Has Family Or Friends That Have Had It? If Anyone Wants To Share It With Me For My Essay, It Will Be Greatly Appreciated x
Answers:    Thankfully I have never had cancer and I have not gone through chemotherapy myself but my 2 year outdated son E has gone through many rounds of it. As a baby he have a Wilms' Tumour - a childhood kidney cancer and successfully beat his cancer with chemotherapy and a nephrectomy of his left kidney containing the entire baseball-sized tumour. Due to the strong doses of chemo drugs, he developed a subsidiary AML leukemia (closely related to ALL) in December and he's currently doing very well surrounded by his fight.
e are lots of symptoms of leukemia but each individual is different. Some display some symptoms while others display other ones. There's no actual tumour as in other cancer but leukemia is a cancer of the cells that create blood cells. E had a cold within November that he just couldn't kick. We took him to the doctor and he was given an antibiotic. He get a little better but as soon as he finished the antibiotic he got sick again. He usually has a couple bruises here and at hand since he is a 2 year old. His walking was greatly affected from one of the drugs within his first chemo cocktail so he trips and falls pretty often. But the bruising he had was more than usual - he bruised at the slightest bump. That's when we really know something was wrong and took him to the doctor again. Once he was diagnosed we found out that his spleen and liver were enlarged - also symptoms of leukemia. Due to the extent of enlargement of his spleen, he have it removed after a round of chemotherapy. So far he has had 3 strong doses of induction chemo and 3 consolidation rounds, and he just finished another strong dose of chemo due to a tumour surrounded by his liver that hasn't been typed yet - unrelated to the leukemia but possibly related to the Wilms' Tumour he have as an infant. He does stay in the hospital during his chemo. His chemo lasts 7 days and he usually stays for up to 2 weeks. He will also have a bone marrow transplant when a donor become available. The chances of relapse with AML are pretty high. Since this is his second time aggression cancer he is considered at a greater risk for relapse so the bone marrow transplant is the best choice for him.

He had some joint pain at the time of diagnosis. I own to say I didn't really think too much of the joint cramp because he doesn't walk well due to one of the previous chemotherapy drugs he had - Vincristine. Because of Vincristine his leg muscles are weaker and he walk with "slapfoot" or "dropfoot" and he trips and falls fairly often. I figure his joint pain was because of falling but since his diagnosis I presently see that it was probably because of the leukemia. On treatment he has had a significant amount of bone and reciprocal pain, especially early on. When it's clear that he is in aching, he does get pain meds to help. I imagine the painkillers do help him but I think even then he does hold some pain but duller than without painkillers.

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I had AML as a child (acute myeloid leukaemia)

When I be 3 years old, I was showing signs of illness. Fevers, nausea, uncomfortable joints, unexplained bruising, weight loss, and just commonly feeling weak. It would not go away, and my parents be worried to say the least

However, a while later, I relapsed. This be bad news treatment is trickier after relapse. My family be told at this point that a bone marrow transplant was my best chance of survival. Finding a donor is not always glib, but siblings are the best matches. My brother, who is 4 years older than me, was tested to be a donor and he be a perfect match. He was cheery to go ahead. I recieved high dose chemotherapy, followed by the bone marrow transplant from my brother, it was a complete nouns.

I then achieved remission again, and I am still there to this daylight. I have now been within remission for 4 years and even though there's always the chance of it returning, the longer you go, the smaller amount chance there is


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