Diseases and Disorders - Leukemia
Transcription
Diseases and Disorders - Leukemia
DD Leukemia v4:6 x 9 Interior 6/30/10 11:19 AM Page 8 CHAPTER ONE What Is Leukemia? L eukemia is a type of cancer that has afflicted people and animals for thousands of years. Anthropologists discovered evidence of the earliest known human case of the disease in a skeleton found at Dakhla, an area of Egypt’s western desert that was a thriving political and economic center from 36 B.C. to A.D. 450. Scientists determined that the skeletal remains contain certain characteristic pits and holes unique to the bones of people with leukemia. Other ancient evidence of leukemia comes from bone marrow deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) extracted from a fifteenhundred-year-old mummy found in the Atacama Desert of Chile. Scientists discovered that the DNA contains a virus that is now known to be associated with a type of leukemia called adult T-cell leukemia. They concluded that the virus probably caused adult T-cell leukemia in the person whose remains were found in the Atacama Desert. First Identified as a Disease Although it has existed throughout human history, leukemia was not really understood as a distinct disease until doctors had the tools to view the microscopic cells that make up living creatures. While many forms of cancer consist of tumors that 8 DD Leukemia v4:6 x 9 Interior 6/30/10 11:19 AM Page 9 What Is Leukemia? 9 can be easily seen or felt in specific areas of the body, leukemia affects the blood and blood-forming tissues. It can only be detected using a microscope and other tools that allow physicians to see or chemically test for its characteristics. German pathologist Rudolf Virchow first identified leukemia as a disease in 1845 after using a microscope to view the blood of several patients with the same unexplained symptoms. Virchow noticed that the blood contained an overabundance of white blood cells and fewer than the normal amount of the other types of blood cells, so he named the disorder weisses blut, which means “white blood” in German. The English word German pathologist Rudolf Virchow first identified leukemia as a disease in 1845.