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Nelspruit, Mpumalanga, South Africa
Leukemia since 2002

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Hoërskool Nelspruit

Hoërskool Nelspruit
- Calvin is n Graad 12 leerling by Nelspruit Hoërskool

- In 2006 is hy as Mnr. NHS en Mnr. Persoonlikheid
by
Nelspruit Hoërskool gekies.

- Hy het ook Ere-klere vir Akademie in 2006 gekry, as leier
gekies vir 2007 en het hierdie jaar die eer gehad om vir die
skool se Eerste Rugby span uit te draf.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Platelets

Blood is made up of several components, each of which has a specialized function:

Plasma
This is the watery fluid in which blood components are suspended. It also contains proteins that help control bleeding and promote normal blood clotting.

Red blood cells
These transport oxygen to the body's tissues and remove carbon dioxide.

White blood cells
The main function of these cells is to fight infection.

Platelets
Platelets are sticky cells which control bleeding and enable blood clotting. Some patients do not make enough platelets. Others lose platelets during, or their platelets do not function properly.
Platelet transfusions may be used for a variety of conditions. Children and adults with cancer or leukemia need platelets after having chemotherapy and radiation treatment. Marrow and organ transplant patients, as well as those suffering from aplastic anemia, also rely on platelet transfusion.

Potential donors are screened to assess whether it is suitable for them to donate platelets. A blood sample is taken to check the full blood count and total protein levels. The donation process is quite simple and takes about one-and-a-half to two hours depending on the procedure. The blood is processed through a cell separator where it is separated into the different components. The platelets are removed and collected in a special bag, while the remaining components are returned to the body.

To be a platelet donor, you must:
- Be between 16 and 60 years of age
- Weigh 55 kg or more
- Have a platelet count above 200 000 per micro liter
- Consider your blood and blood platelets safe to be given to a patient
- Have no medical history of hepatitis
- Not take aspirin or anti-inflammatory medication
on a regular basis

Stem Cells

Stem cells
What are stem cells?
Stem cells are the original building blocks of life which differentiate into all the specialized cells that make up the human body. (skin, blood cells, muscle, bones, nerves ect.)


Where are stem cells found?
Stem cells are abundant in the umbilical cord and placenta.


What illnesses can stem cells treat?
The main application to date has been for blood related diseases, including leukemia, lymphoma, thalassemia, franconi's anemia and sickle cell anemia. Research is being undertaken worldwide in stem cell therapies including for the potential treatment of diabetes, heart tissue regeneration, corneal and retinal reconstruction, spinal cord injuries, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease.

Friday, August 17, 2007

About Leukemia:

What is Leukemia?
Why do some of us get Leukemia, but most do not? Does the person with Leukemia have something wrong with his/her defenses? Was the "something wrong" always there and that's how leukemia got going?

Leukemia is a form of Bone marrow cancer.

The possible causes are usually divided into 3 groups:
1. Genetic (something you're born with)
2. Environmental (coming from your surroundings)
3. Immunologic (you're body's ability to defend itself)

There are different kinds of Leukemia.


Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia: This is commonly known as "childhood Leukemia" and is often referred to as ALL. More boys get it than girls. White children get it more than black children. If leukemia affects you quickly, they are "acute". If they affect you slowly, they are "chronic". The malignant cell in ALL is an abnormal lymphocyte called a lymphoblast ("blast" for short), or a leukemia cell. The blast seems to cause trouble mainly by crowding the bone marrow so that normal cells have a hard time growing. The blasts don't kill the normal cells, they just get in the way. Blasts start out in your bone marrow and they fill that up, but then they go to other places, too. They can go to your lymph nodes or to your liver or spleen.


Blasts stay immature and keep dividing when they shouldn't. Because they are so immature, they can't do their work. They don't know how to be soldiers. When trouble comes, they don't give any orders, or do any fighting.

The common symptoms of ALL are:
1. Feeling tired all the time
2. Fever
3. Easy bruising or bleeding
4. Bone pain
5. Large lymph nodes
6. Big swollen tummy

The common signs are:
1. Pale skin and gums
2. Fever
3. Bruises
4. Tender bones
5. Big lymph nodes
6. Big spleen or liver

If the doctor thinks you have Leukemia, he will want to look at your blood. The doctor wants to know if all the cells that should be there, are there. Do all the cells look like they supposed to, and most important, are there any blasts? Often, just by looking at the blood, doctors can learn what kind of disease you have. There is one more test that you doctor used to decide for sure that you have Leukemia. This is the bone marrow test. Bone marrow is inside your bones, so it's a little harder to get than blood. Doctors will usually take marrow out through a needle from the back of your hip bone.

What doctors do with your bone marrow is pretty much the same as what they do with your blood. They will count all the cells and they will look for blasts.

How doctors treat Leukemia:
The main idea in treating your Leukemia is to get you into a state called REMISSION. Remission is when you don't have any symptoms or signs of leukemia, and when your blood and bone arrow tests don't show any leukemia cells. Remission is not the same as being cured. Some people are staying in remission for so many years that their doctors think they may be cured. But for now, getting you in remission and keeping you there, is the main goal.
The way that doctors get you into remission is by a process called Induction. During your induction, doctors may use many drugs and try to kill as many leukemia cells as they can, no matter where the cells are hiding in your body. The drugs that you will receive will be chosen especially for you, based on things like how old you are and what kind of leukemia you have. The drugs used to kill leukemia cells are extremely strong.

Many of these drugs have to be put right into a blood vessel, so the doctor may want you to have a tube called a "right atrial catheter" placed in your chest. The RA catheter is put in place by a surgeon. A catheter is a soft plastic tube with one end resting in the right atrium of your heart and the other end of the tube either comes out through the skin of your chest or just ends at your skin, depending on the kind of catheter that is used. This will be used to give you the things you need that must be given into a vein without having to give you a shot everytime.

Complications of Leukemia:
Anemia – if your red blood cell count gets to low you may need to have a blood transfusion. This is when you are given blood from a healthy person. It will give you the red cells you need to carry oxygen. Bleeding – If you don't have enough platelets, your blood vessels may begin to leak. Infections – Infections can happen when your white count gets too low, or just because your cells aren't working too well.

Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy means treating a sickness with chemicals or drugs. Each drug has its own way of killing blasts. The amount of each drug that you get can also depend on how your body reacts to it. The other things that drugs do, besides what we want them to do, are called side effects.

Possible side effects:
1. Weakness
2. Constipation
3. Hair loss
4. Loss of appetite and nausea or vomiting
5. Bone marrow depression
6. Fever
7. Big appetite and weight gain
8. Mood changes
9. Higher blood pressure
10. High blood sugar
11. Tiredness
12. Bleeding
13. Sore mouth
14. Diarrhea
15. Sores in your mouth
16. Headache
17. Sore throat
18. Skin rash
19. Liver damage
20. Depression of the blood count
21. Mucositis

Calvin Morse Trust Fund

My son Calvin was diagnosed 4 years ago with leukaemia and was treated but has had a relapse and now the only option is to have a bone marrow transplant.

The cost for the donor are not covered by our medical aid therefore I have set up a trust fund to finance this cost.


The trust fund will be audited by DU TOIT-SMUTS & MATHEWS PHOSA INC and after Calvin’s successful treatment the fund will be used to help other families in the same situation.

The details for the deposits are as follows:
DU TOIT-SMUTS & MATHEWS PHOSA INC
ABSA BANK
ACC NO.: 405 308 5520
ACB CODE : 334 252
REF: MOR121/0001

Wie is Calvin Morse

Calvin is in 2002 met Leukemia gediagnoseer. Met behandeling het dit vir vier en ‘n half jaar baie goed gegaan. Calvin is verlede jaar (2006) as Mnr. NHS en Mnr. Persoonlikheid by Nelspruit Hoërskool gekies. Hy het ook Ere-klere vir Akademie in 2006 gekry, as leier gekies vir 2007 en het hierdie jaar die eer gehad om vir die skool se Eerste Rugby span uit te draf.


Calvin was nog altyd ‘n voorbeeld vir ander met sy positiewe gesindheid en hoe hy met terugslae net weer opstaan en aangaan en dan net nog harder werk. In ‘n gewone maandelikse opvolg het die dokter die slegte nuus gegee dat die kanker terug is. Calvin is tans besig met graad 12 wat dit vir hom moeilik maak om afwesig te wees en agter te raak met skoolwerk. Hy moet vir die volgende twaalf weke elke tweede week in Pretoria wees vir week lange behandeling. Die dokter het begin soek na ‘n geskikte beenmurgskenker vir Calvin. Indien die oorplanting gedoen gaan word, gaan Calvin vir ‘n verdere drie maande in Isolasie wees. Die kans om ‘n geskikte skenker te kry is 1:200 000 en die Beenmurg Register in SA staan maar op 54 000...Die medies betaal nie vir die soek van ‘n geskikte skenker nie en die rekening kan tussen R 100 000 en R 600 000 wees. As die medies uitgeput is teen die oorplanting gedoen moet word, dan kan die operasie koste, (tussen R 300 000 en R 500 000) ook uit eie sak kom. Calvin gaan volgende jaar Rekenaar Ingenieurswese by Tukkies studeer.
Calvin en sy familie is baie na aan mekaar, of dit nou sy eie gesin, ouma's, oupa's, ooms, tannies, niggies of nefies is, almal is baie lief vir hom en vir mekaar!

Terwyl Calvin se ma hom in Pretoria bystaan, is sy pa hard besig in Hazyview om sy werk te doen en na Michelle die jonger sussie te kyk wat nou std 5 is. Arlene, Calvin se oudste sussie werk tans in die USA op 'n kontrak en kan dis nie terug kom Suid Afrika toe tot haar kontrak nie om is nie.
Calvin se "groot" liefde in sy lewe is Marne van Dyk, hulle is reeds meer as 6maande saam en die liefde flikker al hoe helderder met elke aanslag! Sy is n groot ondersteuning vir hom en staan hom by elke sekond van die dag, of dit nou in gedagtes, met oproepe en of op Mxit is, sy is altyd daar vir hom....
Calvin moet elke 2 de week in Pta wees vir behandeling en behoort einde Sept klaar te wees met sterk chemo. Die dr hoop om 'n geskikte skenker te kry en dan die oorplanting te doen sodra Calvin klaar is met sy eindeksamen. ie oorplanting kan dalk in Garden City Cliniek in Jhb gedoen word i.p.v. die Kaap.
Calvin het 'n skootrekenaar gekry by 'n anonieme persoon, wat ongelooflik baie help om die tyd om te kry in die hospitaal. Nicola v Zyl het dit genoem aan Laura Blomerus dat Calvin in die hospitaal is en toe ons weer sien toe stap Nicola en Laura met 'n skootrekenaar in die saal in!
Calvin het 'n droom gekry by 'Reach for 'n dream' en hy het besluit om te vra vir Playstation 3 en toe kry hy nog 4 speletjies ook by. 'Reach for 'n dream' het ook gereel dat die hele familie leeus kon gaan vang in die Kruger Nasionale Park. 'n Wondelike geleentheid wat nie elke dag oor 'n mens se pad kom nie.

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