A bone marrow transplant is a treatment used in healthcare for repairing bone marrow which had been harmed or eliminated by sickness, infection, or chemo. During this surgery, blood stem cells are implanted; these cells then move into the bone marrow when they help to develop fresh cartilage and make new blood cells. Bone marrow is a flexible, fatty material within your bones. Hematopoietic stem cells, or HSCs, are embryonic blood-forming stem cells found in bone marrow. Since the majority of cells have already undergone differentiation, they are limited to reproducing themselves. However, since the stem cells are unfocused, they have an ability to divide via cell division, develop, and eventually mature into a wide variety of cells in the body, or they may stay stem cells. Your harmful stem cells are replaced by new ones after a bone marrow transplant. It also helps in the production of enough blood cells, platelets, or white blood cells by the body to prevent anaemia, bleed...