Myelodysplastic anemia is a condition in which the bone marrow becomes faulty, and myelodysplastic anemia can turn into leukemia. Most people have moderate anemia, with pallor, dizziness, and weakness.
Myelodysplastic patients are slow to develop but may also develop acute myelodysplastic anemia, although acute myelodysplastic anemia is less common. Myeloproliferative anemia may transform into leukemia, and the transformation process takes about a year, so myeloproliferation can be life-threatening and difficult to cure once it transforms into leukemia.
Most myeloproliferative patients with anemia will show moderate anemia. Moderate anemia will show significant symptoms of anemia, physical weakness, palpitations, and shortness of breath are easily seen, causing great distress to the patient’s life and work.
Myelodysplastic anemia may also present with a variety of infections, digestive tract infections, perianal infections, urinary tract infections, and even intracranial infections, causing great harm to the patient.