Hemophilia is a group of inherited blood disorders in which the blood  does not clot properly.
Hemophilia is the standard international spelling, also known as  haemophilia in the UK, other translations include: hémophilie,  hemofilie, hemofili, hemofilia, hämophilie, emofilia. We will use the  standard international spelling for the purpose of this section.
Bleeding disorders are due to defects in the blood vessels, the  coagulation mechanism, or the blood platelets. An affected individual  may bleed spontaneously or for longer than a healthy person after injury  or surgery.
The blood coagulation mechanism is a process which transforms the  blood from a liquid into a solid, and involves several different  clotting factors. The mechanism generates fibrin when it is activated,  which together with the platelet plug, stops the bleeding.
When coagulation factors are missing or deficient the blood does not  clot properly and bleeding continues.
Patients with Hemophilia A or B have a genetic defect which results  in a deficiency in one of the blood clotting factors.
Queen Victoria was a carrier  and passed the mutation to her son  Leopold, and through several of her daughters to members of the royal  families of Spain, Russia, and Germany. 
Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, son of Nicholas II (Russia) suffered  from hemophilia and was a descendant of Queen Victoria - Rasputin was  successful in treating his hemophilia, it was claimed.
 
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