Hemophilia is invisible except when the afflicted person is bleeding, then it is visible in terms of prolonged bleeding, beyond the point when a normal person would have stopped bleeding.
No. Bruising could be an indication that an individual might have an untreated bleeding disorder, however there is no way to tell just by looking at them.
Hemophilia is a Sex-linked genetic disorder. It is found on the X chromosome of chromosome 23.A carrier for Hemophilia(represented by H(dominant) or h(recessive)) would look like this:XHXh(Female)*Males are not carriers for hemophilia-They are either affected or they're not*An affected person would look like this:XhXh(Female) XhY(Male)Someone who is neither a carrier nor affected would look like this:XHXH(Female) XHY(Male)
He has auburn hair, blue greyish eyes, 5'5 in height, too thin due to his hemophilia
Yes females can have hemophilia. Although very rare it has been recorded. A female can get hemophilia if her mother is a carrier and her father has it. Like I said, It doesn't happen often but is possible.
Hemophilia is not contagious by any means, however it can be passed from parent to offspring in the way of genetics.
Hemophilia is one disease in which blood does not clot normally. von Willebrand's Disease
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.
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.
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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.
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