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Showing results for bone-marrow transplant. Search instead for marrow transplant.

bone-marrow transplant

American  
[bohn-mar-oh] / ˈboʊnˌmær oʊ /

noun

  1. Surgery. a technique in which a small amount of bone marrow is withdrawn by a syringe from a donor's pelvic bone and injected into a patient whose ability to make new blood cells has been impaired by a disease, as anemia or cancer, or by exposure to radiation.


bone marrow transplant Scientific  
  1. A technique in which bone marrow is transplanted from one individual to another, or removed from and transplanted to the same individual, in order to stimulate production of blood cells. It is used in the treatment of malignancies, certain forms of anemia, and immunologic deficiencies.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

"Given how aggressive this particular form of leukaemia is, these are quite striking clinical results, and obviously, I'm very happy that we managed to offer hope to patients that otherwise have lost it," said Dr Robert Chiesa from the bone-marrow transplant department at Great Ormond Street Hospital.

From BBC

Once I got through that ordeal—months of chemotherapy, a bone-marrow transplant—I took the task up again, this time with new zeal.

From The Wall Street Journal

The baffled cops investigated and discovered that the man in question had received a bone-marrow transplant from his brother years earlier.

From The Wall Street Journal

It returned a second time, dangerously quick, and she needed a bone-marrow transplant.

From Seattle Times

Isola needed the bone-marrow transplant, and there wasn’t a fully matched donor in her family.

From Seattle Times