Hemophilia Stocks List

Hemophilia Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 9 GRFS Short Seller Gains on Grifols Bet That Tripped Elliott Spinout
May 9 PFE 2 No-Brainer Dividend Stocks to Buy in May
May 9 SGMO Sangamo Therapeutics Presents Next-Generation Modular Integrase Technology Engineered to Enable Large-Scale Genome Editing
May 9 PFE HLS Therapeutics Meets Q1 Earnings Forecast, But Misses on Revs; Lowers 2024 Vascepa Guidance
May 9 QURE uniQure First Quarter 2024 Earnings: Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Lags
May 9 PFE Moderna's New RSV Vaccine Undercuts the Promise of mRNA
May 9 PFE This 6% Yielding Dividend Stock Could Pump Up Your Passive-Income Stream
May 8 SGMO Sangamo Therapeutics Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 8 PFE Second Death - Pfizer Reports Young Boy's Death After One Year Of Gene Therapy Treatment In Muscle Wasting Disorder Trial
May 8 BIIB Jeff Auxier's Firm Dissolves Textainer Group Position, Trims Biogen
May 8 PFE OPKO Health, Inc. (NASDAQ:OPK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 8 PFE Pfizer to settle over 10,000 Zantac-related cancer claims: report
May 8 PFE UPDATE 1-Pfizer agrees to settle over 10,000 Zantac lawsuits, Bloomberg News reports
May 8 PFE Pfizer: A 6% Yield And At 10-Year Lows
May 8 PFE Pfizer agrees to settle over 10,000 Zantac lawsuits, Bloomberg News reports
May 8 BIIB Why This 1 Value Stock Could Be a Great Addition to Your Portfolio
May 8 PFE Pfizer Stock: Not A Value Trap, Here's Why
May 8 PFE Got $1,000? 3 Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever
May 8 BAX Baxter International First Quarter 2024 Earnings: Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Lags
May 8 BIIB Q1 2024 Abcellera Biologics Inc Earnings Call
Hemophilia

Haemophilia is a mostly inherited genetic disorder that impairs the body's ability to make blood clots, a process needed to stop bleeding. This results in people bleeding longer after an injury, easy bruising, and an increased risk of bleeding inside joints or the brain. Those with a mild case of the disease may have symptoms only after an accident or during surgery. Bleeding into a joint can result in permanent damage while bleeding in the brain can result in long term headaches, seizures, or a decreased level of consciousness.There are two main types of haemophilia: haemophilia A, which occurs due to not enough clotting factor VIII, and haemophilia B, which occurs due to not enough clotting factor IX. They are typically inherited from one's parents through an X chromosome with a nonfunctional gene. Rarely a new mutation may occur during early development or haemophilia may develop later in life due to antibodies forming against a clotting factor. Other types include haemophilia C, which occurs due to not enough factor XI, and parahaemophilia, which occurs due to not enough factor V. Acquired haemophilia is associated with cancers, autoimmune disorders, and pregnancy. Diagnosis is by testing the blood for its ability to clot and its levels of clotting factors.Prevention may occur by removing an egg, fertilizing it, and testing the embryo before transferring it to the uterus. Treatment is by replacing the missing blood clotting factors. This may be done on a regular basis or during bleeding episodes. Replacement may take place at home or in hospital. The clotting factors are made either from human blood or by recombinant methods. Up to 20% of people develop antibodies to the clotting factors which makes treatment more difficult. The medication desmopressin may be used in those with mild haemophilia A. Studies of gene therapy are in early human trials.Haemophilia A affects about 1 in 5,000–10,000, while haemophilia B affects about 1 in 40,000, males at birth. As haemophilia A and B are both X-linked recessive disorders, females are rarely severely affected. Some females with a nonfunctional gene on one of the X chromosomes may be mildly symptomatic. Haemophilia C occurs equally in both sexes and is mostly found in Ashkenazi Jews. In the 1800s haemophilia was common within the royal families of Europe. The difference between haemophilia A and B was determined in 1952. The word is from the Greek haima αἷμα meaning blood and philia φιλία meaning love.

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