Hemophilia is a genetic disorder that prevents blood clotting. Most common in men, there are two main types of hemophilia: hemophilia A and B. Below is a curated list of recommended reads for family members, friends and carers of patients with hemophilia, with help from Good Reads and Alibris.
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Hemophilia is a rare genetic disorder preventing proper blood clotting due to deficient clotting factors. It primarily affects men and boys, with hemophilia A and B being the most common types. Hemophilia A accounts for 80% of cases and is caused by an F8 gene mutation. While there is no cure, treatments can manage bleeding and improve life expectancy.
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Hemophilia is a rare disorder in which a person’s blood is not able to clot properly, resulting in unusually easy and prolonged bleeding.
Hemophilia A is a rare genetic disorder that affects the blood’s ability to clot properly. It is the most common form of hemophilia, responsible for 80% of all cases.
In the U.S., hemophilia A is estimated to affect one in every 5,000 male births, hemophilia B one in 25,000 male births, and hemophilia C one in every 100,000 people (males and females). Hemophilia A is thus four times more common than hemophilia B, and about 10 times more common than…
Hemophilia, a disorder characterized by excessive bleeding, is caused by the lack of activity of certain clotting factors, which are proteins that are needed to form blood clots.
Hemophilia is a rare disorder in which the blood doesn’t clot properly, resulting in the disease’s hallmark symptoms of bleeds — excessive bleeding that extends over a prolonged period of time — that in turn leads to other complications.
The Most Commonly Asked Questions About Hemophilia
Hemophilia is it a genetic disorder where the body doesn’t produce clotting factor, which means blood can’t clot. This makes patients susceptible to both heavy external and internal bleeding, which if left untreated, can be life-threatening. Thanks to Hemophilia Village, we have the answers to some of the most commonly…
How to Explain Hemophilia to Children
In this simple animated video from CSL Behring US, hemophilia is explained in easy-to-understand language aimed at children and caregivers of newly diagnosed hemophilia patients. MORE: Explaining hemophilia A and hemophilia B The narrator shares the basic difference between hemophilia A and hemophilia B, and that…
There are several types of hemophilia, a rare bleeding disorder wherein the blood fails to clot properly. Hemophilia A and B are the most common types, while hemophilia C is comparatively rare.