Science, asked by azamellahi, 9 months ago

note on royal disease​

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Answered by Anonymous
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Hemophilia is a rare blood condition where people do not have the clotting factor which enables their blood to clot when bleeding. It's an inherited disease that's usually passed from mother to son. It's also a disease that's been prevalent in European royal families.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Hemophilia has been called a "royal disease". This is because the hemophilia gene was passed from Queen Victoria, who became Queen of England in 1837, to the ruling families of Russia, Spain, and Germany. ... Of her children, one son, Leopold, had hemophilia, and two daughters, Alice and Beatrice, were carriers.

Explanation:

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