Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Haemophilia> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 72 of
72
with 100 items per page.
- Haemophilia abstract "Haemophilia (/hiːməˈfɪliə/; also spelled hemophilia in North America, from the Greek haima αἷμα 'blood' and philia φιλία 'love') is a group of hereditary genetic disorders that impair the body's ability to control blood clotting or coagulation, which is used to stop bleeding when a blood vessel is broken. Haemophilia A (clotting factor VIII deficiency) is the most common form of the disorder, present in about 1 in 5,000–10,000 male births. Haemophilia B (factor IX deficiency) occurs in around 1 in about 20,000–34,000 male births.Like most recessive sex-linked, X chromosome disorders, haemophilia is more likely to occur in males than females. This is because females have two X chromosomes while males have only one, so the defective gene is guaranteed to manifest in any male who carries it. Because females have two X chromosomes and haemophilia is rare, the chance of a female having two defective copies of the gene is very remote, so females are almost exclusively asymptomatic carriers of the disorder. Female carriers can inherit the defective gene from either their mother or father, or it may be a new mutation. Although it is not impossible for a female to have haemophilia, it is unusual: a female with haemophilia A or B would have to be the daughter of both a male haemophiliac and a female carrier, while the non-sex-linked haemophilia C due to coagulant factor XI deficiency, which can affect either sex, is more common in Jews of Ashkenazi (east European) descent but rare in other population groups.Haemophilia lowers blood plasma clotting factor levels of the coagulation factors needed for a normal clotting process. Thus when a blood vessel is injured, a temporary scab does form, but the missing coagulation factors prevent fibrin formation, which is necessary to maintain the blood clot. A haemophiliac does not bleed more intensely than a person without it, but can bleed for a much longer time. In severe haemophiliacs even a minor injury can result in blood loss lasting days or weeks, or even never healing completely. In areas such as the brain or inside joints, this can be fatal or permanently debilitating.".
- Haemophilia diseasesdb "5555".
- Haemophilia emedicineSubject "med".
- Haemophilia emedicineTopic "3528".
- Haemophilia icd10 "D66-D68".
- Haemophilia icd9 "286".
- Haemophilia medlineplus "000537".
- Haemophilia meshId "D025861".
- Haemophilia omim "306700".
- Haemophilia thumbnail PBB_Protein_F8_image.jpg?width=300.
- Haemophilia wikiPageExternalLink a-royal-shame-prince-leopold%E2%80%99s-hemophilia-and-its-effect-on-medical-research.
- Haemophilia wikiPageExternalLink hemaware.org.
- Haemophilia wikiPageExternalLink An%20Introduction%20to%20Haemophilia%20.pdf.
- Haemophilia wikiPageExternalLink hemophilia-a-and-b.
- Haemophilia wikiPageExternalLink MainNHF.aspx?menuid=179&contentid=45&rptname=bleeding.
- Haemophilia wikiPageID "14006".
- Haemophilia wikiPageRevisionID "602718998".
- Haemophilia align "right".
- Haemophilia caption "Deficiency in coagulation factor VIII is the most common cause of haemophilia.".
- Haemophilia diseasesdb "5555".
- Haemophilia emedicinesubj "med".
- Haemophilia emedicinetopic "3528".
- Haemophilia hasPhotoCollection Haemophilia.
- Haemophilia icd "286".
- Haemophilia icd "D66-D68".
- Haemophilia medlineplus "537".
- Haemophilia meshid "D025861".
- Haemophilia name "Haemophilia".
- Haemophilia omim "306700".
- Haemophilia quote ""About seventy or eighty years ago, a woman by name of Smith, settled in the vicinity of Plymouth, New Hampshire, and transmitted the following idiosyncrasy to her descendants. It is one, she observed, to which her family is unfortunately subject, and had been the source not only of great solicitude, but frequently the cause of death. If the least scratch is made on the skin of some of them, as mortal a hemorrhagy will eventually ensue as if the largest wound is inflicted. So assured are the members of this family of the terrible consequences of the least wound, that they will not suffer themselves to be bled on any consideration, having lost a relation by not being able to stop the discharge occasioned by this operation."".
- Haemophilia source "John C. Otto, 1803".
- Haemophilia width "25.0".
- Haemophilia wordnet_type synset-disease-noun-1.
- Haemophilia subject Category:Haemophilia.
- Haemophilia type Disease.
- Haemophilia type AilmentCondition.
- Haemophilia type Situation.
- Haemophilia comment "Haemophilia (/hiːməˈfɪliə/; also spelled hemophilia in North America, from the Greek haima αἷμα 'blood' and philia φιλία 'love') is a group of hereditary genetic disorders that impair the body's ability to control blood clotting or coagulation, which is used to stop bleeding when a blood vessel is broken. Haemophilia A (clotting factor VIII deficiency) is the most common form of the disorder, present in about 1 in 5,000–10,000 male births.".
- Haemophilia label "Emofilia".
- Haemophilia label "Haemophilia".
- Haemophilia label "Hemofilia".
- Haemophilia label "Hemofilia".
- Haemophilia label "Hemofilia".
- Haemophilia label "Hemofilie".
- Haemophilia label "Hämophilie".
- Haemophilia label "Hémophilie".
- Haemophilia label "Гемофилия".
- Haemophilia label "ناعور (مرض)".
- Haemophilia label "血友病".
- Haemophilia label "血友病".
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilie.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hämophilie.
- Haemophilia sameAs Αιμοφιλία.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hémophilie.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs Emofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs 血友病.
- Haemophilia sameAs 혈우병.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilie.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs Hemofilia.
- Haemophilia sameAs m.03myr.
- Haemophilia sameAs Q134003.
- Haemophilia sameAs Q134003.
- Haemophilia sameAs 502.
- Haemophilia sameAs C0684275.
- Haemophilia wasDerivedFrom Haemophilia?oldid=602718998.
- Haemophilia depiction PBB_Protein_F8_image.jpg.
- Haemophilia isPrimaryTopicOf Haemophilia.
- Haemophilia name "Haemophilia".