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Human X-linked Recessive Disorders 1. Hemophilia What is hemophilia? What causes hemophilia? blood disorder in which blood does not clot properly bleeding can be external or internal several proteins are involved in the blood clotting process (clotting factors 1 through 13) in the most common form of hemophilia (Hemophilia A), the protein known as Factor VIII is missing or defective in a less common form of hemophilia (Hemophilia B), the protein Factor IX is missing or defective How common is hemophilia? hemophilia is more likely to be found in men and rarely found in women; however women can be gene carriers of the disease in the United States, about 20,000 males have hemophilia about 90 percent of those with hemophilia have type A among U.S.-born males, about one in 5,000 will have hemophilia What are the symptoms of hemophilia? individuals bleed longer and more profusely from sustained injuries frequent and hard-to-stop nosebleeds internal bleeding from the joints and muscles which can results in organ damage blood sometimes observed in stool or urine if there is bleeding in the joints, joints become tight, swollen, painful, and warm to the touch bleeding in the brain may cause long headaches, neck stiffness, vomiting, sleepiness, behavior changes, double vision, convulsions, seizures, weakness in arms or legs, difficulty walking What are the available treatments? with proper treatments, these individuals lead very normal lives “replacement therapy” performed which involves infusing a clotting factor into the bloodstream depending on severity of the case, some individuals receive regular infusions, while others only receive infusions on an as-needed basis both approaches can be performed at home 2. Color Blindness What is color blindness? What causes color blindness? color vision deficiency, characterized by a person’s inability to differentiate between various colors in most cases, the individual is lacking or deficient of cone receptor cells in the retina, usually either green cones or red cones How common is color blindness? ~ 8% of all men and 0.5% of all women suffer from color blindness approximately 95-99 percent of all color blind people suffer from red-green color blindness around 75 percent of people suffering from red-green color blindness lack or are deficient of green cones, while the remaining 24 percent lack or are deficient of red cones blue cone deficiencies are very rare and are NOT sex-linked (chromosome 7) tends to be a bit more prevalent in Caucasian population than any other group What are the symptoms of color blindness? Confusion between reds and greens However, the problem prevails in the whole color spectrum