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Studies on Genomic Variation in Factor VIII and Factor IX Loci Among Indians in the Context of Diagnosis and Management of Hemophilia

IR@IICB: CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, Kolkata

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Title Studies on Genomic Variation in Factor VIII and Factor IX Loci Among Indians in the Context of Diagnosis and Management of Hemophilia
 
Creator Saha, Atreyee
 
Subject Molecular & Human Genetics
 
Description The history of Hemophilia shows the human mind attempting to define and encompass a mysterious yet fascinating phenomenon; and also human heart responding to the challenge of repeated adversity. Hemophilia was first described in the Jewish writings of 2nd century AD. A ruling of rabbi Judah the Patriarch exempts a woman’s third son from being circumcised if his two elder brothers had died of bleeding after circumcision (Katzenelson 1958; Rosner 1969); and Rabbi Simon ben Gamaliel forbade a boy to be circumcised because the sons of his mother’s three elder sisters had died after circumcision (Seligsohn 1973). The first modern description of hemophilia is attributed to Dr. Conard Otto, a physician in Philadelphia, who in 1803 published a treatise entitled “An account of a hemorrhagic disposition existing in certain families”. He clearly appreciated the cardinal features of hemophilia: an inherited tendency of males to bleed (Ingram 1976). Otto traced back the pedigree of the family he studied to a woman who had settled near Plymouth, New Hampshire, in about 1720-30. These accounts began to define a clinical syndrome on which the 19th century developed an extensive literature. Various long names were used – Hemorrhoea, idiosyncrasia hemorrhagica, hematophilia, bleeding disease, hereditary haemorrhagic diathesis; or rather strange name “hemophilia”, love of blood, occurs in the title of Hopff’s treatise of 1828. Hemophilia B was only distinguished from more common type in 1952, and is often referred to as “Christian Disease” after the surname of the first child reported with this condition.
 
Date 2010
 
Type Thesis
NonPeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://www.eprints.iicb.res.in/1265/1/Atreyee_thesis.pdf
Saha, Atreyee (2010) Studies on Genomic Variation in Factor VIII and Factor IX Loci Among Indians in the Context of Diagnosis and Management of Hemophilia. PhD thesis, Jadavpur University.
 
Relation http://www.eprints.iicb.res.in/1265/