Leukemia Basics
Clinical Manifestations
Complications (PRIORITY!)
Treatment & Nursing Care
Other Hematologic Disorders
100

This is the classic triad seen in leukemia due to bone marrow suppression.

Infection, anemia, and bleeding

100

This symptom is often the ONLY sign of infection in immunocompromised leukemia patients.

What is fever

100

This is the TOP priority complication in leukemia patients.

Infection

100

This is the first-line treatment for AML.

Chemotherapy (induction therapy)

100

This disease is characterized by overproduction of RBCs and thick blood.

Polycythemia Vera

200

This type of leukemia has rapid onset and involves immature cells (blasts).

Acute leukemia

200

Petechiae and bleeding gums indicate this complication.

Thrombocytopenia / bleeding

200

This syndrome occurs after chemotherapy due to rapid cell destruction.

Tumor Lysis Syndrome (TLS)

200

This medication blocks BCR-ABL in CML.

Imatinib (Gleevec)

200

This mutation is associated with Polycythemia Vera.

JAK2 mutation

300

This leukemia is most common in children and peaks around age 4.

Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)

300

This symptom is common in ALL and often seen in children.

Bone pain

300

This life-threatening condition involves both clotting and bleeding.

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

300

This transplant can potentially cure some hematologic cancers.

Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT)

300

This condition involves malignant plasma cells and is remembered by CRAB.

Multiple Myeloma

400

This leukemia is associated with the Philadelphia chromosome.

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)

400

These three symptoms together are called “B symptoms.”

Fever, night sweats, weight loss

400

This lab value is most important to assess infection risk.

Absolute Neutrophil Count (ANC)

400

This diet is used to reduce infection risk in neutropenic patients.

Low-microbial (neutropenic) diet

400

CRAB stands for calcium, renal failure, anemia, and this.

Bone lesions

500

This leukemia is most common in older adults and often managed with “watch and wait.”

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)

500

This organ enlargement is a classic finding in CML.

Splenomegaly

500

Electrolyte imbalance in TLS includes high potassium and this dangerous cardiac risk.

Arrhythmias

500

This nursing intervention should be avoided in leukemia patients due to infection risk.

Rectal procedures (enemas, suppositories, thermometers)

500

This lymphoma is identified by Reed-Sternberg cells.

Hodgkin Lymphoma

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