How bones make blood - Melody Smith
 At any given moment, trillions of cells 
 are traveling through your blood vessels,
  sometimes circling the body 
 in just one minute.
  Each of these cells 
 has its origins deep in your bones.
  Bones might seem rock-solid, 
 but they’re actually quite porous inside.
  Large and small blood vessels 
 enter through these holes.
  And inside most of the large bones 
 of your skeleton is a hollow core
  filled with soft bone marrow.
  Marrow contains fat 
 and other supportive tissue,
  but its most essential elements 
 are blood stem cells.
  These stem cells are constantly dividing.
  They can differentiate 
 into red blood cells,
  white blood cells, and platelets,
  and send about hundreds of billions 
 of new blood cells
  into circulation every day.
  These new cells enter the bloodstream
  through holes 
 in small capillaries in the marrow.
  Through the capillaries,
  they reach larger blood vessels 
 and exit the bone.
  If there’s a problem with your blood,
  there’s a good chance 
 it can be traced back to the bone marrow.
  Blood cancers often begin 
 with genetic mutations in the stem cells.
  The stem cells themselves 
 are not cancerous,
  but these mutations can interfere 
 with the process of differentiation
  and result in malignant blood cells.
  So for patients with advanced 
 blood cancers like leukemia and lymphoma,
  the best chance for a cure is often 
 an allogeneic bone marrow transplant,
  which replaces the patient’s bone marrow 
 with a donor’s.
  Here’s how it works.
  First, blood stem cells 
 are extracted from the donor.
  Most commonly,
  blood stem cells are filtered out 
 of the donor’s bloodstream
  by circulating the blood 
 through a machine
  that separates it 
 into different components.
  In other cases, 
 the marrow is extracted directly
  from a bone in the hip, the iliac crest, 
 with a needle.
  Meanwhile, the recipient 
 prepares for the transplant.
  High doses of chemotherapy or radiation 
 kill the patient’s existing marrow,
  destroying both malignant cells 
 and blood stem cells.
  This also weakens the immune system,
  making it less likely 
 to attack the transplanted cells.
  Then the donor cells are infused into 
 the patient’s body through a central line.
  They initially circulate 
 in the recipient’s peripheral bloodstream,
  but molecules on the stem cells, 
 called chemokines, act as homing devices
  and quickly traffic them 
 back to the marrow.
  Over the course of a few weeks,
  they begin to multiply and start producing
 new, healthy blood cells.
  Just a small population 
 of blood stem cells
  can regenerate a whole body’s 
 worth of healthy marrow.
  A bone marrow transplant 
 can also lead to something
  called graft-versus-tumor activity,
  when new immune cells 
 generated by the donated marrow
  can wipe out cancer cells the recipient’s 
 original immune system couldn’t.
  This phenomenon can help eradicate 
 stubborn blood cancers.
  But bone marrow transplants 
 also come with risks,
  including graft-versus-host disease.
  It happens when the immune system 
 generated by the donor cells
  attacks the patient’s organs.
  This life-threatening condition 
 occurs in about 30–50% of patients
  who receive donor cells 
 from anyone other than an identical twin,
  particularly when the stem cells 
 are collected
  from the blood 
 as opposed to the bone marrow.
  Patients may take 
 immunosuppressant medications
  or certain immune cells may be removed 
 from the donated sample
  in order to reduce the risk 
 of graft-versus-host disease.
  But even if a patient 
 avoids graft-versus-host disease,
  their immune system 
 may reject the donor cells.
  So it’s crucial to find the best match 
 possible in the first place.
  Key regions of the genetic code 
 determine how the immune system
  identifies foreign cells.
  If these regions are similar 
 in the donor and the recipient,
  the recipient’s immune system 
 is more likely to accept the donor cells.
  Because these genes are inherited, 
 the best matches are often siblings.
  But many patients 
 who need a bone marrow transplant
  don’t have a matched family member.
  Those patients 
 turn to donor registries of volunteers
  willing to offer their bone marrow.
  All it takes to be on the registry is 
 a cheek swab to test for a genetic match.
  And in many cases, 
 the donation itself
  isn’t much more complicated 
 than giving blood.
  It’s a way to save someone’s life
  with a resource 
 that’s completely renewable.