Word Study
hemolysin |
hemolysis |
hemolytic |
hemolytic anemia |
hemophile |
hemophilia
| hemophilia a
| hemophilia b
| hemophiliac
| hemophilic
| hemopoiesis
hemophilia
WORDNET DICTIONARY
Noun hemophilia has 1 sense
- hemophilia(n = noun.state) bleeder's disease, haemophilia - congenital tendency to uncontrolled bleeding; usually affects males and is transmitted from mother to son; Array has particulars: classical haemophilia, classical hemophilia, haemophilia a, hemophilia a, christmas disease, haemophilia b, hemophilia b, angiohemophilia, vascular hemophilia, von willebrand's disease
is a kind of blood disease, blood disorder, sex-linked disorder
CIDE DICTIONARY
hemophilia, n. [NL., fr. Gr. a"i^ma, blood + filei^n to love.].
A condition characterized by a tendency to profuse and uncontrollable hemorrhage from the slightest wounds; it is caused by an absence or abnormality of a clotting factor in the blood, and is a recessive genetic disease linked to the X-chromosome, and therefore usually occurs only in males; there are several specific forms. It may be treated by administering purified clotting factor. It was formerly termed Hematophilia . [1913 Webster]
THESAURUS
hemophilia
Christmas disease, Hand-Schuller-Christian disease, Hartnup disease, Letterer-Siwe syndrome, Werdnig-Hoffmann disease, achromatic vision, acute leukemia, albinism, anemia, angiohemophilia, aplastic anemia, chronic leukemia, color blindness, cyclic neutropenia, cystic fibrosis, dichromatic vision, dysautonomia, erythrocytosis, hemoglobinopathy, hemophilia A, hemophilia B, hypochromic anemia, ichthyosis, infectious granuloma, iron deficiency anemia, leukemia, leukemic reticuloendotheliosis, macrocytic anemia, mongolianism, mongolism, mucoviscidosis, multiple myeloma, muscular dystrophy, myelogenous leukemia, neutropenia, pancreatic fibrosis, pernicious anemia, plasma cell leukemia, plasmacytoma, polycythemia, pseudoleukemia, purpura, purpura hemorrhagica, sickle-cell anemia, thalassemia, vascular hemophilia
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