The history of hemophilia has been impacted by the practice of royal family inbreeding because the genetic disorder is more likely to be passed down when closely related individuals have children. Inbreeding among royal families increased the chances of hemophilia being inherited, leading to its prevalence in certain royal bloodlines.
Hemophilia is considered a Royal Disease because..... Queen Victoria of England passed the mutation to her son Leopold and, through several of her daughters, who were married to other royal Families in Europe, including the royal families of Spain, Germany, and Russia.
They outrule England.
no for us a presidant for the US. England a royal family
The Royal Families Romanov of Russia and Queen Victoria's family struggled with hemophilia because of interbreeding.
England- Queen North Korea- Dictator Thailand- Royal Family Romania- Royal Family Greece- Royal Family
no! unless you are in the royal family in England
president lincoin
I think you mean Hemophilia, which was brought about from incest of the royal family in Russia that you might know from the movie Anastasia.
Queen Victoria and the English family, and the Romanovs (actually, just one of their children, Alexei).
Hemophilia is broken into three subcategories; Hemophilia A, Hemophilia B, and Hemophilia C. These subcategories designate a person as having a deficiency of one of three specific clotting proteins. Hemophilia A is the deficiency of the protein called Clotting Factor VIII. Hemophilia B is the deficiency of Clotting Factor IX. Hemophilia C is the deficiency of Clotting Factor XI. "Royal" hemophilia is simply a reference to Hemophilia B and is therefore a result of a deficiency in the Clotting Factor IX protein. It is sometimes called the royal disease because it has been known to have been passed through some royal families throughout history.
Yes