Blood - clotting diseases
include hemophilia B, von Willebrand's, and thrombocytopenia.
Health concerns for the otterhound
include hemophilia, bloating, hip dysplasia and thrombocytopenia.
Blood - clotting diseases
include hemophilia B, factor VII deficiency, and von Willebrand's disease.
Other blood disorders that have shown significant benefit from targeted gene therapy in small trials
include hemophilia (specifically, factor IX deficiency), severe beta - thalassemia (deficiency for the adult beta - globin gene) and leukemia, where the patient's immune cells were treated to enable them to recognize cancer cells and destroy them.
Not exact matches
Family medical history (for both you and your partner),
including any cognitive impairments; birth defects; early infant loss; deformities; or any inherited diseases, such as Tay - Sachs disease,
hemophilia, muscular dystrophy, or cystic fibrosis
There are now more than 100 gene therapy clinical trials aimed toward cancer, genetic diseases (such as ADA deficiency, cystic fibrosis and
hemophilia A), infectious diseases (
including AIDS) and autoimmune diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis).
TSRI is internationally recognized for its contributions to science and health,
including its role in laying the foundation for new treatments for cancer, rheumatoid arthritis,
hemophilia, and other diseases.
An international team of hematologists
including Guy Young, MD, of Children's Hospital Los Angeles, has found that in patients with
hemophilia A with inhibitors, a novel therapy called emicizumab, decreases incidence of bleeding episodes by 87 %.
Exciting clinical applications of gene editing
include correcting the mutation in the bone marrow stem cells of patients with sickle cell disease or
hemophilia.
Other genetic diseases
include Tay - Sachs disease (damage to the gene for the enzyme hexosaminidase A leads to an accumulation of a chemical in the brain that destroys it), sickle cell anemia (improper coding of the gene that produces hemoglobin),
hemophilia (lack of a gene for a blood - clotting factor) and muscular dystrophy (caused by a defective gene on the X chromosome).
Examples
include Huntington's disease, sickle cell anemia, cystic fibrosis and
hemophilia.
These mutations are also relevant to melanoma and to numerous associated birth defects of organs
including the ear, eye, brain, reproductive, digestive and respiratory tracts,
hemophilia, and cellular defects in protein transport, organelle biogenesis and apoptosis.
Throughout his career, Mr. Mendels - Flandre has developed a profound multidisciplinary expertise in international projects management; building expertise in disease areas
including dialysis, nutrition and, most noticeably, rare diseases like
hemophilia or lysosomal storage diseases.
Blood - clotting diseases
include von Willebrand's, factor II deficiency,
hemophilia A, and the more serious
hemophilia B.
Other health issues in Scottish Collies
include colitis, pancreatic insufficiency, cerebellar ataxia, and blood - clotting diseases (von Willebrand's and
hemophilia A).
These may
include: hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia, osteochondrosis dessicans (OCD), craniomandibular osteopathy (CMO), hypertrophic osteodystrophy (HOD), eosinophilic panosteitis, Wobbler Syndrome, alantoaxial subluxation, Legg - Calve - Perthes» Disease, medial patellar luxation, eye diseases, subaortic stenosis, pulmonary stenosis, ventricular septal defect, patent ductus arteriosis, Tetralogy of Fallot, persistent right aortic arch, dilated cardiomyopathy,
hemophilia, Von Willebrand's disease, epilepsy, hydrocephalus, intervertebral disk disease, mange, hypothyroidism, Cushing's Disease, pituitary dwarfism and autoimmune skin disorders.
Other health issues in Greyhounds
include epilepsy, blood - clotting diseases (von Willebrand's and
hemophilia A), chronic kidney disease, hypothyroidism, inflammatory bowel disease, and megaesophagus.
Blood - clotting diseases
include von Willebrand's disease,
hemophilia A, and the more severe
hemophilia B.
Because dogs get about 220 of the same inherited diseases and disorders that humans do —
including Alzheimer's, muscular dystrophy,
hemophilia and retinal degeneration — medical researchers are able to study the underlying genetic defects and, through dogs, seek cures.
Gained experience in several therapeutic areas
including oncology, autoimmune diseases, and
hemophilia
Dr. Brown's research publications have
included: Self - cutting and sexual risk among adolescents in intesive psychiatric treatment; Promoting safer sex among HIV - positive youth with
hemophilia: Theory, intervention, and outcome; Predictors of retention among HIV /
hemophilia health care professionals; Impact of sexual abuse on the HIV - risk - related behavior of adolescents in intensive psychiatric treatment; Heroin use in adolescents and young adults admitted for drug detoxification; and Children and adolescents living with HIV and AIDS: A review
Today academic institutions and teaching hospitals across the country receive federal or private grants to support groundbreaking research using human fetal tissue on a wide range of conditions
including diabetes, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, spinal cord injuries,
hemophilia, leukemia, sickle cell anemia, cortical blindness, fetal aneuploidy, ALS, and others.
The «well - established» FAM - III (Skinner, Steinhauer, & Sitarenios, 2000) and its short - form have been used in a variety of pediatric populations
including families of children with chronic pain, cystic fibrosis, developmental disabilities, eating disorders, and
hemophilia.