Yes - there are dogs with hemophilia. German Shepards in Europe with hemophilia can be traced back to one dog: Canto von der Wienerau.
For more informationon hemophilia and dogs: http://mydogfluffy.com/faq.htm
Mice with hemophilia are used to research hemophilia medication and a cure for hemophilia.
hemophilia B is also known as Christmas disease because Stephen Christmas was the first patient with the disease, and hemophilia A is just known as classic hemophilia.
50 million ppl have hemophilia
No, Hemophilia is a genetic disease. A person is born with it.
Her father has to have hemophilia as well, and the mother is a carrier or also has hemophilia. So if we pretend that the hemophilia gene is "x", you need to have "xx" to have hemophilia. The father must have the genotype "Yx" and the mother has the have "Xx" or "xx".
There are no hard answers to this, it depends strictly on luck. The statistics are though not very good for their children. Statisically the couple have a chance of having a normal son, a daughter that is a carrier for hemophilia, a daughter with hemophilia and a son with hemophia.
Hemophilia is one disease in which blood does not clot normally. von Willebrand's Disease
There is no chance that the child will have hemophilia even if the spouse has hemophilia. Any girls the couple has will be carriers if the spouse has hemophilia.
50%
Hemophilia, Sickle Cell anemia.
Can anyone be a candidate for the hemophilia a
hemophilia B is also known as Christmas disease because Stephen Christmas was the first patient with the disease, and hemophilia A is just known as classic hemophilia.
50%
Hemophilia is when your blood clots slowly or not at all.
50 million ppl have hemophilia
No, Hemophilia is a genetic disease. A person is born with it.
The classical spelling of hemophilia is haemophilia.
There are two types of hemophilia: hemophilia A (sometimes called classical hemophilia) and hemophilia B (sometimes called Christmas disease). Both are caused by a low level or absence of one of the proteins in the blood (called factors) that control bleeding. Hemophilia A is caused by a deficiency of factor VIII, and hemophilia B is caused by a deficiency of factor IX. There is no difference between the two types of hemophilia, except that hemophilia B is about five times less common than hemophilia A.