Types of Hemophilia

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Hemophilia, Type A: eMedicine Emergency Medicine

emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: Hemophilia A is an inherited, X-linked, recessive disorder resulting in deficiency of functional plasma coagulation factor VIII. Significant rates of spontaneous mutation and acquired immunologic processes can result in this disorder as well. Morbidity and death ...View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com

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Most Recently Shared on April 27, 2010 at 4:12 am By:

Health_SS Susan S Health Advocate

Hemophilia A is an inherited disorder resulting in deficiency of functional plasma coagulation factor VIII. http://bit.ly/985sDR

2 years ago...

Hemophilia, Type B: eMedicine Emergency Medicine

emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: Hemophilia B is an inherited, X-linked, recessive disorder resulting in deficiency of functional plasma coagulation factor IX. Spontaneous mutation and acquired immunologic processes can result in this disorder as well. Morbidity and death are primarily the ...View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com

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Most Recently Shared on April 27, 2010 at 4:09 am By:

Health_SS Susan S Health Advocate

Hemophilia B is an inherited disorder resulting in deficiency of functional plasma coagulation factor IX. http://bit.ly/9cFp1i

2 years ago...

Journal of Medical Case Reports | Abstract | A patient with hypereosinophilic syndrome that manifested with acquired hemophilia and elevated IgG4: a case report

jmedicalcasereports.com — “Hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) is defined as a prolonged state (more than six months) of eosinophilia (greater than 1500 cells/muL), without an apparent etiology and with end-organ damage. HES can cause coagulation abnormalities. Among HES types, the lymphocytic variant (L-HES) is derived from a monoclonal proliferation of T lymphocytes. Here, we describe the case of a patient with L-HES who presented with a coagulation abnormality. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such report iView full resource at jmedicalcasereports.com

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Most Recently Shared on February 14, 2012 at 3:11 pm By:

jmedcasereports JMedCaseReports Medical Journal

First reported case of L-HES and IgG4-related disease overlapping described in #JMCR: http://t.co/GBL5tGiU

3 months ago...

Gene Therapy and Children

kidshealth.org — “Gene therapy carries the excitement of a cure-all for many diseases, the controversy surrounding the altering of human imperfection, and the promise of a medical treatment most of us would never imagine possible.View full resource at kidshealth.org

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Most Recently Shared on October 22, 2009 at 8:41 pm By:

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    Mom working in health content publishing field. Enjoy sharing information for healthy living.

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    Susan S

    Mom working in health content publishing field. Enjoy sharing information for healthy living.

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  • jmedcasereports

    JMedCaseReports

    Journal of Medical Case Reports (JMCR) is an open access peer-reviewed journal published by BioMed Central & edited by Prof Michael Kidd.

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