What are the clinical features?
Spontaneous bleeding or delayed-onset bleeding (joints, muscular and soft tissue, mucosa) in response to different degrees of trauma
Repeated hemarthrosis (e.g., knee joint) → hemophilic arthropathy (i.e., destruction of the joint due to repeated hemarthrosis)
Typically develops by early adulthood
Most commonly involves the knees, ankles, and elbows
Recurrent bruising or hematoma formation
Oral mucosa bleeding, epistaxis, excessive bleeding following small procedures (e.g., dentist procedures)
Hemophilia C does not typically manifest with spontaneous bleeding, hemarthrosis, or deep tissue bleeding.
List further sites/symptoms of hemorrhage.
CNS (e.g., headache, neck stiffness)
Gastrointestinal tract (e.g., melena, hematemesis)
Genitourinary system (e.g., hematuria)
How do female carriers behave?
Female carriers may show mild symptoms.
On what does the degree of bleeding depend?
The degree of bleeding and, therefore, severity of hemophilia depends on residual factor activity levels; normal reference activity is > 50%
Hemarthrosis of the knee
The left knee is grossly enlarged with purple-brown discoloration. There is also an oblique scar spanning lateral to medial, likely due to previous knee replacement surgery.
These findings are consistent with a periprosthetic hemarthrosis.
Hemarthrosis in hemophilia
MRI knee (T2-weighted; left: coronal plane; right: sagittal plane)
A large joint effusion with suprapatellar extension is accompanied by high signal intensity representing hemorrhage (black arrows) and intermediate-to-low signal intensity representing synovial thickening (white arrow).
Hemarthrosis is a common occurrence in patients with severe hemophilia.
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