*disclaimer - i am by no means a doctor and my advice is not professional lol
but hemophilia is a genetic disorder with the blood, which would lead me to believe that if you have hemophilia, it would be evident from birth
Hemophilia must be diagnosed through blood tests. Family history of bleeding disorders can help narrow the tests needed to make an accurate diagnosis. If hemophilia is known in the patient's history and a bleeding disorder is suspected, it is probably the same, both in severity and type. Actual diagnosis however should only be bade following appropriate blood tests.
The age at diagnosis can provide information about when the mutation began to have an observable impact on health. For some conditions, an earlier age at diagnosis may suggest a more severe form of the disease associated with the mutation. Conversely, a later age at diagnosis may indicate a milder or variable expression of the condition.
Hemophilia is caused by a deficiency of clotting factor VIII (hemophilia A) or clotting factor IX (hemophilia B).
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.
50 million ppl have hemophilia
The average age of diagnosis of the Huntington's disease is 63.1 years old
The Tsarevich Alexei's blood failed to clot properly, leading to a diagnosis of hemophilia.
The average age at diagnosis is 60 years old
The average age at diagnosis is 60 years old
The average age at diagnosis is 70
the median age at diagnosis is 55-60 years.
yes
Dissociative identity disorder is also known as multiple personality disorder. The average age of diagnosis with this disorder is around thirty.
3
Most patients with myelofibrosis are over 50 years old; the average age at diagnosis is 65 years
No, Hemophilia does not discriminate on age, race or religion. Hemophilia is a genetic disorder (with the exception of acquired hemophilia) and therefore an individual has hemophilia from the the time they are born until they die. There is one very rare form of genetic hemophilia where the individual "outgrows" the disorder. In fact, the hormonal changes that take place during puberty increase the production of the clotting proteins to a point above the 50% cut off for being considered as having hemophilia. the genetics however, remain the same.
Genetic hemophilia is a life-long chronic condition. A person would have it all of their life, from birth to death. Acquired hemophilia happens as a result of some other circumstance and is not directly linked to age. A person may get acquired hemophilia from causes such as extensive liver damage or certain medications. Since these conditions normally occur in older populations it generally trends that way but is no way limited to that age set.