Thursday, November 14, 2019
Understanding Haemophilia :: Health Medicine
Understanding Haemophilia           In the human body, each cell contains 23 pairs of chromosomes, one of  each pair inherited through the egg from the mother, and the other  inherited through the sperm of the father. Of these chromosomes, those that  determine sex are X and Y. Females have XX and males have XY. In addition  to the information on sex, 'the X chromosomes carry determinants for a  number of other features of the body including the levels of factor VIII  and factor IX.'1 If the genetic information determining the factor VIII and  IX level is defective, haemophilia results. When this happens, the protein  factors needed for normal blood clotting are effected. In males, the single  X chromosome that is effected cannot compensate for the lack, and hence  will show the defect. In females, however, only one of the two chromosomes  will be abnormal. (unless she is unlucky enough to inherit haemophilia from  both sides of the family, which is rare.)2 The other chromosome is likely  to be normal and she can therefore compensate for this defect.         There are two types of haemophilia, haemophilia A and B. Haemophilia A  is a hereditary disorder in which bleeding is due to deficiency of the  coagulation factor VIII (VIII:C)3. In most of the cases, this coagulant  protein is reduced but in a rare amount of cases, this protein is present  by immunoassay but defective.4 Haemophilia A is the most common severe  bleeding disorder and approximately 1 in 10,000 males is effected. The most  common types of bleeding are into the joints and muscles. Haemophilia is  severe if the factor VIII:C levels are less that 1 %, they are moderate if  the levels are 1-5% and they are mild if they levels become 5+%.5         Those with mild haemophilia bleed only in response to major trauma or  surgery. As for the patients with severe haemophilia, they can bleed in  response to relatively mild trauma and will bleed spontaneously.         In haemophiliacs, the levels of the factor VIII:C are reduced. If the  plasma from a haemophiliac person mixes with that of a normal person, the  Partial thromboplastin time (PTT) should become normal. Failure of the PTT  to become normal is automatically diagnostic of the presence of a factor  VIII inhibitor. The standard treatment of the haemophiliacs is primarily  the infusion of factor VIII concentrates, now heat-treated to reduce the  chances of transmission of AIDS.6 In the case of minor bleeding, the factor  VIII:C levels should only be raised to 25% with one infusion.  					    
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