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The Celle Seminars_Page 137

Cede Seminar I, Case 5: Myelogenous Leukemia

fingers—whereas the spleen is really going down and is very, very hard. The last blood test was a little better; it showed leukocytes 450,000. In December, the count was 515,000. His urea count has also gone down a little bit. (G.V.): How much?
(Therapist): From nine to seven. Thrombocytes were always low. We brought along the results of all but the latest tests with us, those he forgot to bring.
(G.V.): I haven’t been able to piece together a clear chronology of events from what you’ve told me. Can you briefly fill me in? (M.P.): I began to feel ill while studying abroad. When I got back to Germany I felt very tired and nervous. (G.V.): How old were you? Chronologically, can you tell me what took place?
(M.E): My tonsils were taken out when 1 was four or five years old, I’m not sure exactly. At the age of fifteen I developed this gynecomastia; I underwent an operation for it when I was twenty-one. Later I had the operation on my nasal septum, but I don’t remember the exact date, I might have been twenty-two. (G.V.): You are now thirty-two, right?
(M.P.): Thirty-one. I don’t exactly know when my skin problems started, but I remember that I took the soap treatment while studying abroad. (G.V.): What year was that? (M.P.): 1987.
(G.V.): That was two years ago. Can you describe how the skin condition started, at what age? (M.P.): I think it was one or two years before that. (G.V.): Can you describe what the reaction was like? (M.P.): I had white spots in several regions. (G.V.): Big or small spots?
(M.P.): They varied; in some places they were small and abundant, in others they were larger. They appeared mostly in regions where I sweat a lot. (G.V.): Was there any itching with it?

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