Hemophilia is diagnosed through a series of blood test. Currently most places do not automatically test an individual for hemophilia, meaning that the doctor must have a reason to suspect hemophilia in order to run the tests.
The most common reasons a doctor would suspect hemophilia is if hemophilia was known to run in the individual's family, or if the individual seems to have an abnormally long clotting time. The clotting issue often presents itself at circumcision leading to most cases being diagnosed very early on.
Diagnosis for hemophilia is done by a blood test to determine how long the blood takes to clot and if any of the clotting factors are of low quantity or simply missing entirely from the sample of blood.
to diagnose hemophilia you go through kemo theropy
if u bleed for long periods of time when injured and through a blood test
yes, through blood tests
It detects problems at the level of the kidney, since this is a specific kidney function test.
urine test
It is possible to diagnose Hemophilia in the fetus during pregnancy by demonstrating the abnormal gene.
Your urine, or your blood.
Yes.
detects deoxy sugar
endoscopy and barium swallow very effective
To my knowledge, mixing tests are used with some types of acquired hemophilia to determine the source of the hemophilia. In the test, I believe they mix two separate samples of plasma together. One sample being from the affected individual who has acquired hemophilia, one from a normal source without the acquired hemophilia. If the ability of the blood to coagulate is decreased, this would indicate that the source of the acquired hemophilia was in the blood itself (some anticoagulant). If the blood, once mixed retained normal clotting, this would indicate a problem with the actual production of the needed clot forming components.
A Melisa test is a blood test that detects allergys. A Mellisa test helps you to find out if you have a allergy for chemicals, metals and other things.
A urine pregnancy test detects hCG, or human chorionic gonadotropin.
Pap smear
In forensics, the dermal nitrate test detects the presence of unburned gunpowder and nitrate residue on the hands of a suspect.