Diamond's anemia

Dimon-Blackfen anemia is a genetic blood disease in which the formation of hemoglobin in the red bone marrow (blood-forming tissue) is impaired due to a defect in one of the enzymes

Anatomical and phylogeny of the main components of blood. Fundamentals of oncohematology

Anatomy data clearly show the relationship of hematopoiesis with the two main organs of the hematopoietic series of organs: the thymus (thymus gland, “T” system) and the red bone marrow, the bone marrow zone of which directly carries out the process of producing blood cells from hematopoietic stem cells. In this region, humans annually have about 200 million segmented neutrophils, 150 million red blood cells, 80 million platelets, as well as certain types of leukocytes

Among the morphological studies of the hematopoietic internal environment, we can point to