Hemophilia

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Hemophilia By TJ Lindsay and Ryan Filipone Mrs. Geithner Maron P.4

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Hemophilia. By TJ Lindsay and Ryan Filipone Mrs. Geithner Maron P.4. What is Hemophilia?. Hemophilia is a blood disorder where it takes a long time for the blood to clot. There are two types names A and B. A simple paper cut can bleed excessively. How do you get Hemophilia?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hemophilia

HemophiliaBy TJ Lindsay and Ryan Filipone

Mrs. Geithner Maron P.4

What is Hemophilia?Hemophilia is a blood disorder where it takes a

long time for the blood to clot. There are two types names A and B.

A simple paper cut can bleed excessively

How do you get Hemophilia?

Hemophilia is a genetic disorder and is carried on the x chromosome, which means it is x-linked.

Only Females can carry Hemophilia

Who carries the disease?Only Females can carry the genetic disorder

because it is x-linked (on the x chromosome). Females feature two x chromosomes vs. Males who have one x and one y chromosome.

Carrier Chart

Frequency of HemophiliaHemophilia A occurs in 1 in 10,000 boy babies

Hemophilia B occurs in 7 times as many people as Hemophilia A

Symptoms of HemophiliaIf you are a Hemophiliac you would experience:

Excessive bleeding (even from small cuts)

Easily bruised during infancy or childhood

How is Hemophilia diagnosed?

Hemophilia is diagnosed either by genetic counseling (looking back at family history) to see if you could be a carrier of the disease or take blood tests to see: How long it takes for your blood to clot, whether the blood has low levels of any of the clotting factors, or whether one of the clotting factors is completely missing from the blood.

Treatments of HemophiliaSome possible treatments are: A clotting factor

to help from excessive bleeding, or infusions of desmopressin (mainly to prevent nosebleeds)

Cure for HemophiliaThere is no cure for Hemophilia

Works consultedClinic staff, Mayo. “Treatments and drugs.” MayoClinic

<www.mayoclinic.com> (4 February 2011)

Conrad Stoppler, Melissa. “Hemophilia.” MedicineNet <www.medicinenet.com> (4 February 2011)

"hemophilia." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, 2011. Web. 06 Feb. 2011.

“Hemophilia.” Ncbi. March 2, 2009. <www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov> (3 February 2011)

Hine, Robert. "hemophilia." Science Online. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 6 Feb. 2011

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