What’s wrong with blood that doesn’t rise after leukemia chemo?

Blood not rising after chemotherapy for leukemia may be bone marrow suppression after chemotherapy.
After diagnosis of leukemia, chemotherapy is required, but chemotherapeutic drugs are easy to cause bone marrow suppression, with bone marrow suppression manifestations such as reduction of total white blood cells, thrombocytopenia, and lower hemoglobin.
In patients with mild myelosuppression, blood counts may increase with the administration of leukocyte- or platelet-boosting drugs (e.g., recombinant human granulocyte-stimulating factor, recombinant human interleukin-11, etc.), but there is no change in severe cases.
In patients with severe myelosuppression, it is necessary to consider discontinuing chemotherapy drugs or changing the chemotherapy regimen according to the patient’s own situation to avoid serious infection, shock, hemorrhage and other situations.
Bone marrow suppression is a common phenomenon in the course of leukemia chemotherapy, which needs to be detected and treated as early as possible to avoid delaying the condition.