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A. Quick (1949)
Pediatric aspects of hemophilia.Pediatrics, 3 3
C. Merskey (1951)
Haemophilia Associated with Normal Coagulation TimeBritish Medical Journal, 1
H. Joules, R. Macfarlane (1938)
PSEUDO-HÆMOPHILIA IN A WOMANThe Lancet, 231
A. Quick, M. Stefanini (1949)
The state of component A (prothrombin) in human blood; evidence that it is partly free and partly in an inactive or precursor form.The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine, 34 9
A. Quick, E. Epstein (1952)
Thromboplastic activity in human blood.Journal of applied physiology, 4 11
A. Quick (1951)
Management of hemophilia in general practice.Journal of the American Medical Association, 145 1
I. Schulman, C. Smith (1952)
Hemorrhagic disease in an infant due to deficiency of a previously undescribed clotting factor.Blood, 7 8
J. Otto (1808)
An Account of an Hemorhagic Disposition Existing in Certain FamiliesThe Medical and Physical Journal, 20
A. Quick (1951)
The physiology and pathology of hemostasis
A. Quick, C. Hussey (1951)
Influence of Concentration of Thromboplastin on Prothrombin Time of Human and Dog Plasma.∗Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, 76
F. Madison, A. Quick (1945)
HEMOPHILIA‐LIKE DISEASE IN THE FEMALE: With a Note on the Clotting Time of the Recalcified PlasmaThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 200
A. Quick, C. Hussey (1952)
HEMOPHILIA: CLINICAL AND LABORATORY OBSERVATIONS RELATIVE TO DIAGNOSIS AND INHERITANCEThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 223
Quick Aj, Stapp Wf, Hussey Cv (1952)
The effect of heating on the thromboplastic activity of rabbit brain extract; a new test for the diagnosis of hemophilia.Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine, 39
B. Alexander, G. Landwehr (1949)
Evolution of a prothrombin conversion accelerator in stored human plasma and prothrombin fractions.The American journal of physiology, 159 2
A. Quick, C. Hussey (1951)
On the comparative prothrombic activity of human and dog blood.The Journal of clinical investigation, 30 9
M. Israél̀s, H. Lempert, E. Gilbertson (1951)
Haemophilia in the female.Lancet, 1 6670
THE QUESTION of whether hemophilia can occur in the female aroused the early interest of students of the disease, and it continues to attract attention, because if an answer can be found, an advance will have been achieved in bringing about a better understanding of a baffling disorder. Otto1 in his classical article stated, "When the cases shall become more numerous, it may perhaps be found that the female sex is not entirely exempt, but, as far as my knowledge extends, there has not been an instance of their being attacked." In 1770 a case of hemophilia appeared in Tenna, a little village isolated in the Swiss Alps. By 1854 this community with a population of 105 had 16 bleeders: 5 females and 11 males. The bleeding tendency of the women, however, consisted only of profuse menstruation.2 It is very probable that some carriers were married to bleeders,
American journal of diseases of children – American Medical Association
Published: Jun 1, 1953
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