Dictionary Definition
haemophilia n : congenital tendency to
uncontrolled bleeding; usually affects males and is transmitted
from mother to son [syn: hemophilia, bleeder's
disease]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪliə
Alternative spellings
hemophiliaNoun
haemophilia- Any of several hereditary illnesses that impair the body's ability to control bleeding, usually passed from mother to son.
Synonyms
Derived terms
See also
Translations
- French: hémophilie
- Greek: αιμοφιλία
- Italian: emofilia
Extensive Definition
Haemophilia (also spelled as hemophilia, from the
Greek
haima "blood" and philia
"to love") is a group of hereditary genetic
disorders that impair the body's ability to control blood clotting or coagulation. In its most
common form, Hemophilia
A, clotting factor VIII
is absent. In Haemophilia
B, factor IX is
deficient. Hemophilia A occurs in about 1 in 5,000–10,000 male
births, while Hemophilia B occurs at about 1 in about
20,000–34,000.
The effects of this sex-linked,
X
chromosome disorder are manifested almost entirely in males,
although the gene for the disorder is inherited from the mother.
Females have two X chromosomes while males have only one, lacking a
'back up' copy for the defective gene. Females are therefore almost
exclusively carriers of the disorder, and may have inherited it
from either their mother or father. In about 30% of cases of
Hemophilia B, however, there is no family history of the disorder
and the condition is the result of a spontaneous gene mutation
- Hemophilia B involves a lack of functional clotting Factor IX.
- Hemophilia C involves a lack of functional clotting Factor XI.
- Hypofibrinogenemia involves a lack of functional clotting Factor I. Because it is so rare, about 1 to 2 cases per million births, it has no definite treatment approved by the FDA. It affects males and females equally. The blood of people with Hypofibrinogenemia neither clots nor contains sufficient amounts of Fibrinogen.
Occurrence
Hemophilia is quite rare, with only about 1 instance in every 10,000 births (or 1 in 5,000 male births) for hemophilia A and 1 in 50,000 births for hemophilia B. About 18,000 people in the United States have hemophilia. Each year in the US, about 400 babies are born with the disorder. Hemophilia usually occurs in males and less often in females. It is estimated that about 2500 Canadians have hemophilia A and about 500 Canadians have hemophilia B.History
The earliest possible implicit reference to hemophilia may have been in the Talmud, a Jewish holy text, which states that males did not have to be circumcised if two brothers had already died from the procedure. In 1000, the Arab physician Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi (known as Albucasis in the West) wrote a more explicit description of hemophilia in his Al-Tasrif, in which he wrote of an Andalusian family whose males died of bleeding after minor injuries.In 1803, Dr. John Conrad
Otto, a Philadelphia physician, wrote an account about "a
hemorrhagic disposition existing in certain families." He
recognized that the disorder was hereditary and that it affected
males and rarely females. He was able to trace the disease back to
a woman who settled near Plymouth in 1720. The first usage
of the term "hemophilia" appears in a description of the condition
written by Hopff at the University of Zurich in 1828. In 1937, Patek and
Taylor, two doctors from Harvard, discovered
anti-hemophilic
globulin. Pavlosky, a doctor from Buenos Aires, found Hemophilia A
and Hemophilia B
to be separate diseases by doing a lab test. This test was done by
transferring the blood of one hemophiliac to another hemophiliac.
The fact that this corrected the clotting problem showed that there
was more than one form of hemophilia.
Haemophilia in European royalty featured prominently and thus
is sometimes known as "the royal disease".
Queen Victoria passed the mutation to her son Leopold
and, through several of her daughters, to various royals across the
continent, including the royal families of Spain,
Germany, and
Russia.
Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, son of Nicholas II,
was a descendant of Queen Victoria and suffered from hemophilia. It
was claimed that Rasputin was
successful at treating the
Tsarevich Alexei of Russia's hemophilia. At the time, a common
treatment administered by professional doctors was to use aspirin,
which worsened rather than lessen the problem. It is believed that,
by simply advising against the medical treatment, Rasputin could
bring visible and significant improvement to the condition of
Alexei.
Prior to 1985, there were no laws enacted within
the U.S. to screen blood. As a result, many hemophilia patients who
received untested and unscreened clotting factor prior to 1992 were
at an extreme risk for contracting HIV and Hepatitis C
via these blood products. It is estimated that more than 50% of the
Hemophilia population, over 10,000 people, contracted HIV from the
tainted blood supply in the United States alone.
As a direct result of
the contamination of the blood supply in the late 1970s and
early/mid 1980s with viruses such as Hepatitis and
HIV, new
methods were developed in the production of clotting factor
products. The initial response was to heat-treat (pasteurize) plasma-derived
factor concentrate, followed by the development of monoclonal
factor concentrates, which use a combination of heat treatment and
affinity chromatography to inactivate any viral agents in the
pooled plasma from which the factor concentrate is derived. The
Lindsay
Tribunal in Ireland investigated, among other things, the slow
adoption of the new methods.
Genetics
Females possess two X-chromosomes, whereas males
have one X and one Y
chromosome. Since the mutations causing the disease are
recessive,
a woman carrying the defect on one of her X-chromosomes may not be
affected by it, as the equivalent allele on her other chromosome
should express itself to produce the necessary clotting factors.
However the Y-chromosome in men has no gene for factors VIII or IX. If the
genes responsible for production of factor VIII
or factor
IX present on a male's X-chromosome are deficient there is no
equivalent on the Y-chromosome, so the deficient gene is not masked
by the dominant allele
and he will develop the illness.
Since a male receives his single X-chromosome
from his mother, the son of a healthy female silently carrying the
deficient gene will have a 50% chance of inheriting that gene from
her and with it the disease; and if his mother is affected with
haemophilia, he will have a 100% chance of being a haemophiliac. In
contrast, for a female to inherit the disease, she must receive two
deficient X-chromosomes, one from her mother and the other from her
father (who must therefore be a haemophiliac himself). Hence
haemophilia is far more common among males than females. However it
is possible for female carriers to become mild haemophiliacs due to
lyonisation
(inactivation) of the X chromosomes. Haemophiliac daughters are
more common than they once were, as improved treatments for the
disease have allowed more haemophiliac males to survive to
adulthood and become parents. Adult females may experience menorrhagia (heavy periods)
due to the bleeding tendency. The pattern of inheritance is
criss-cross type. This type of pattern is also seen in colour
blindness.
As with all genetic disorders, it is of course
also possible for a human to acquire it spontaneously through
mutation, rather than
inheriting it, because of a new mutation in one of their parents'
gametes. Spontaneous mutations account for about 33% of all
haemophilia
A and 20% of all hemophilia B
cases. Genetic
testing and genetic
counseling is recommended for families with haemophilia.
Prenatal
testing, such as amniocentesis, is
available to pregnant women who may be carriers of the
condition.
Probability
If a female gives birth to a haemophiliac child, either the female is a carrier for the disease or the haemophilia was the result of a spontaneous mutation. Until modern direct DNA testing, however, it was impossible to determine if a female with only healthy children was a carrier or not. Generally, the more healthy sons she bore, the higher the probability that she was not a carrier. If the RH factor of the born male is different from the mother, the child will not be affected.If a male is afflicted with the disease and has
children, his daughters will be carriers of haemophilia. His sons,
however, will not be affected with the disease. This is because the
disease is X-linked and the father cannot pass haemophilia through
the Y chromosome. Males with the disorder are then no more likely
to pass on the gene to their children than carrier females, though
all daughter they sire will be carriers and all sons they father
will not have hemophilia (unless the mother is a carrier).
Treatment
Though there is no cure for hemophilia, it can be controlled with regular infusions of the deficient clotting factor, i.e. factor VIII in haemophilia A or factor IX in hemophilia B. Factor replacement can be either isolated from human blood serum, recombinant, or a combination of the two. Some hemophiliacs develop antibodies (inhibitors) against the replacement factors given to them, so the amount of the factor has to be increased or non-human replacement products must be given, such as porcine factor VIII.If a patient becomes refractory to replacement
coagulation factor as a result of circulating inhibitors, this may
be partially overcome with recombinant human factor VII
(NovoSeven), which is registered for this indication in many
countries.
In early 2008, the US
Food and Drug Administration approved Xyntha (Wyeth)
anti-hemophilic factor, genetically engineered from the genes of
Chinese hamster ovary cells. Since 1993 (Dr. Mary Nugent)
recombinant factor products (which are typically cultured in
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)
tissue culture cells and involve little, if any human plasma
products) have been available and have been widely used in
wealthier western countries. While recombinant clotting factor
products offer higher purity and safety, they are, like
concentrate, extremely expensive, and not generally available in
the developing world. In many cases, factor products of any sort
are difficult to obtain in developing countries.
In Western countries, common standards of care
fall into one of two categories: prophylaxis or on-demand.
Prophylaxis involves the infusion of clotting factor on a regular
schedule in order to keep clotting levels sufficiently high to
prevent spontaneous bleeding episodes. On-demand treatment involves
treating bleeding episodes once they arise. In 2007, a clinical
trial was published in the
New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) comparing on-demand
treatment of boys (< 30 months) with Hemophilia A with
prophylactic treatment (infusions of 25 IU/kg body weight of
Factor
VIII every other day) in respect to its effect on the
prevention of joint-diseases. When the boys reached 6 years of age,
93% of those in the prophylaxis group and 55% of those in the
episodic-therapy group had a normal index joint-structure on
MRI.
Prophylactic treatment, however, resulted in average costs of
$300,000
per year. The author of an editorial published in the same issue of
the NEJM demands more clinical studies addressing the
cost-effectiveness of prophylactic treatment.
It is recommended that people affected with
Hemophilia do specific exercises to strengthen the joints,
particularly the elbows, knees, and ankles. Exercises include
elements which increase flexibility, tone, and strength of muscles,
increasing their ability to protect joints from damaging bleeds.
These exercises are recommended after an internal bleed occurs and
on a daily basis to strengthen the muscles and joints to prevent
new bleeding problems. Many recommended exercises include standard
sports warm-up and training exercises such as stretching of the
calves, ankle circles, elbow flexions, and Quadriceps sets.
Alternative and complementary treatments
Scientific studies indicate that hypnosis and self-hypnosis can be effective at reducing bleeds and the severity of bleeds and thus the frequency of factor treatment. Herbs which strengthen blood vessels and act as astringents may also benefit patients with hemophilia. These herbs include: Bilberry(Vaccinium myrtillus), Grape seed extract (Vitis vinifera), Scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), Stinging nettle (Urtica dioica), Witch hazel (Hamamelis virginiana), and yarrow (Achillea millefolium).Differential diagnosis
Haemophilia A can be mimicked by von Willebrand Disease- von Willebrand Disease type 2A, where decreased levels of von Willebrand Factor can lead to premature proteolysis of Factor VIII. In contrast to haemophilia, vWD type 2A is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion.
- von Willebrand Disease type 2N, where von Willebrand Factor cannot bind Factor VIII, autosomal recessive inheritance. (ie; both parents need to give the child a copy of the gene). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von_Willebrand_disease#Type_2N_.28Normandy.29
- von Willebrand Disease type 3, where lack of von Willebrand Factor causes premature proteolysis of Factor VIII. In contrast to haemophilia, vWD type 3 is inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion.
References
External links
- Immune tolerance induction in patients with haemophilia A with inhibitors
- Canadian Hemophilia Society
- National Hemophilia Foundation
- Haemophilia timeline
- UK Haemophilia Society (charity)
- European Haemophilia Consortium (EHC)
- Haemophilia Foundation Australia (HFA)
- World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH)
- Romanian Hemophilia Association
- Haemophiliacare.co.uk - A resource for patients and carers sponsored by Baxter Healthcare
- Tainted Blood
- Birchgrove Group: self-help group for people with Haemophilia and HIV
- Living Stories
- Simple haemophilia overview
- Hemophilia Federation of America
haemophilia in Afrikaans: Hemofilie
haemophilia in Arabic: نزف الدم الوراثي
haemophilia in Bengali: হিমোফিলিয়া
haemophilia in Bosnian: Hemofilija
haemophilia in Bulgarian: Хемофилия
haemophilia in Catalan: Hemofília
haemophilia in Czech: Hemofilie
haemophilia in Danish: Hæmofili
haemophilia in German: Hämophilie
haemophilia in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αιμοφιλία
haemophilia in Spanish: Hemofilia
haemophilia in Esperanto: Hemofilio
haemophilia in Persian: هموفیلی
haemophilia in French: Hémophilie
haemophilia in Irish: Haemaifilia
haemophilia in Korean: 혈우병
haemophilia in Croatian: Hemofilija
haemophilia in Indonesian: Hemofilia
haemophilia in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Hemophilia
haemophilia in Italian: Emofilia
haemophilia in Hebrew: המופיליה
haemophilia in Lithuanian: Hemofilija
haemophilia in Hungarian: Hemofília
haemophilia in Dutch: Hemofilie
haemophilia in Japanese: 血友病
haemophilia in Norwegian: Hemofili
haemophilia in Polish: Hemofilia
haemophilia in Portuguese: Hemofilia
haemophilia in Romanian: Hemofilie
haemophilia in Russian: Гемофилия
haemophilia in Simple English: Haemophilia
haemophilia in Serbian: Хемофилија
haemophilia in Finnish: Verenvuototauti
haemophilia in Swedish: Blödarsjuka
haemophilia in Tamil: இரத்தம் உறையாமை
haemophilia in Turkish: Hemofili
haemophilia in Urdu: انس الدم
haemophilia in Chinese: 血友病