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What is Hemophilia?

All About Hemophilia / Haemophilia


 What is Hemophilia? Symptoms and Diagnosis
Types of Hemophilia Treatment for Hemophilia
Causes of Hemophilia Resources
What is Coagulation?  

What is Hemophilia? What is Haemophilia?

young queen victoria
"Many members of royalty in Europe inherited
their hemophilia from Queen Victoria"
This is a file from Wikimedia Commons

Hemophilia is a group of inherited blood disorders in which the blood does not clot properly.

Hemophilia is the standard international spelling, also known as haemophilia in the UK, other translations include: hémophilie, hemofilie, hemofili, hemofilia, hämophilie, emofilia. We will use the standard international spelling for the purpose of this section.

Bleeding disorders are due to defects in the blood vessels, the coagulation mechanism, or the blood platelets. An affected individual may bleed spontaneously or for longer than a healthy person after injury or surgery.

The blood coagulation mechanism is a process which transforms the blood from a liquid into a solid, and involves several different clotting factors. The mechanism generates fibrin when it is activated, which together with the platelet plug, stops the bleeding.

When coagulation factors are missing or deficient the blood does not clot properly and bleeding continues.

Patients with Hemophilia A or B have a genetic defect which results in a deficiency in one of the blood clotting factors.

Queen Victoria was a carrier and passed the mutation to her son Leopold, and through several of her daughters to members of the royal families of Spain, Russia, and Germany.

Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, son of Nicholas II (Russia) suffered from hemophilia and was a descendant of Queen Victoria - Rasputin was successful in treating his hemophilia, it was claimed.





Next Page: Types of Hemophilia >


This Hemophilia information section was written by Christian Nordqvist for Medical News Today, and may not be re-produced in any way without the permission of Medical News Today. Additional materials provided by Wyeth.




Sources of information:

Further information

Disclaimer: The Hemophilia section on Medical News Today is funded by an educational grant from Wyeth. This guide is provided for general information purposes only. The materials contained within this guide do not constitute medical or pharmaceutical advice, which should be sought from qualified medical and pharmaceutical advisers. Full disclaimer.


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