Cancer Symptoms Written Off As Signs of Grief
- Laura McLoughlin, 39, did not think anything of the pain, bruising, and extreme weight loss she began experiencing in 2019 following her mother’s death.
- After six months she saw her doctor and learned the symptoms had all been the result of chronic myeloid leukemia.
- McLoughlin is fighting the disease by taking a pill known as a tyrosine kinase inhibitor to slow the cancer’s growth.A tyrosine kinase inhibitors blocks the enzymes that help grow cancer cells.
Laura McLoughlin, 39, did not think anything of the pain, bruising, and extreme weight loss she began experiencing in 2019 following her mother’s death.
Read MoreIn the end, it was not IBS causing her physical pain or the death of her mother fueling her weight loss.
The pain and weight loss, and bruising had all been the result of chronic myeloid leukemia.
Chronic myeloid leukemia is often diagnosed in older adults, and its symptoms can be similar to those people feel after losing a loved one.
They include feeling rundown and tired, weight loss, blood being drained from the skin and night sweats.
The good news for McLoughlin and anyone else diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukemia is that it has gone from fatal to almost always treatable in just the past 20 years.
McLoughlin is now looking to spread awareness to others while she fights the disease by taking a tablet known as a tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
“Maybe if I’d seen more about the symptoms in the media and online, I would have gone to my [doctor] much sooner,” she told Birmingham Live.
“At diagnosis, I had 100 percent leukemia cells; by 12 months, I had hit every treatment target and had just 0.048 percent of leukemia cells left in my blood.”
How Do Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Fight Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
Tyrosine kinases play a major role in several cell functions. The signaling, growth, and division of cells often involve tyrosine kinases.
Individuals with chronic myeloid leukemia often have these enzymes at levels that are either too high or too active.
A tyrosine kinase inhibitor blocks these enzymes from working against the body and helping to grow cancer cells.
Advancements in Treating Myeloid Leukemia
Chronic Myeloid Leukemia and the Categories of Leukemia
Leukemia is different from other types of cancer because it is not just broken down into stages of severity but into different categories based on the cells that grow into cancer cells and how quickly those cells grow. Leukemia means that one type of white blood cell is growing out of proportion to the others and taking up the body’s resources. A leukemia patient’s bone marrow will become filled with these cancer cells, and that could result in anemia, abnormally low levels of platelets, and white blood cells failing to fight off infections.
There are four basic categories doctors use to identify the different types of leukemia.
- Acute leukemia grows very quickly.
- Chronic leukemia grows slower, over several years.
- Lymphoid leukemia grows from lymphoid cells, which produce antibodies and protect against viruses.
- Myeloid leukemia grows from myeloid cells, which is the body’s first defense for bacteria.
Breaking Down Categories of Leukemia
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