Is it a good thing that stem cell transplants have more rejection?

Usually, a more severe rejection of stem cell transplantation is not a good thing. It may cause damage to various organs of the body, leading to deterioration of the condition, which in turn causes secondary trauma to the patient’s body.
1. The severity of rejection is different for different patients. If the patient has acute rejection reaction within 100 days after stem cell transplantation and the symptoms are relatively mild, only mild diarrhea and skin rash, then it is generally not particularly serious and does not need to be particularly worried.
2. However, if the rejection reaction is more serious, resulting in lesions on the skin, joints and liver, then it is not a good thing, and may lead to disorders of the autoimmune system, so that the disease recurs again, causing secondary trauma to the patient’s body.
Stem cell transplantation refers to the process of removing a certain number of hematopoietic stem cells from the donor’s body and transplanting them into the recipient’s body to rebuild the recipient’s hematopoietic and immune systems. Since the recipient’s own immune system has a certain degree of immune rejection, some patients may experience rejection after the transplantation procedure.
Therefore, after stem cell transplantation, patients should take anti-rejection drugs, such as cyclosporine, prednisone, etc., in time under the guidance of the doctor, and maintain a healthy diet and lifestyle to avoid serious rejection reactions.