Leg pain should be combined with other clinical symptoms, laboratory tests, bone marrow aspiration, imaging tests and other results to determine leukemia.
Leukemia is a malignant disease, which can infiltrate tissues and organs all over the body. When leukemia invades the bones or when the proliferation of malignant cells in the bone marrow cavity causes the pressure to rise, leg pain may appear, and it will also involve the sternum and pelvic pain at the same time, so a single symptom of leg pain can not determine leukemia.
If the leg pain is accompanied by anemia, bleeding, fever, infection, enlarged lymph nodes, abnormal white blood cell count and platelet count in laboratory examination, large number of proliferating primitive naive cells in bone marrow aspiration, and enlarged spleen in imaging examination, leukemia can be judged.
When the symptoms of leg pain appear, you should seek medical treatment as soon as possible for relevant examinations to clarify the cause of the disease, and regular treatment under the guidance of the doctor, so as to avoid delaying the condition.