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Assessment of quality of life by functional independence score in hemophilic patients: a single-center experience

Research Authors
Osama Ahmed Ibrahiem, Ahmad F Thabet, Shymaa S Tony, Kerollos Motwade N Kerollos, Sawsan M Moeen
Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
The Egyptian Journal of Internal Medicine
Research Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Research Vol
Volume 34 Issue 1
Research Website
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?oi=bibs&cluster=789118715766483548&btnI=1&hl=en
Research Year
2022
Research_Pages
74
Research Abstract

Hemophilia is an inherited condition that is caused by the deficiency of clotting factors in the blood. The most common presentations of hemophilia are hemarthrosis and muscle hemorrhage. The severity of the bleeding episodes can vary from mild to severe resulting in pain and swelling of the joints and the muscles. Repeated musculoskeletal bleeding can result in hemophilic arthropathies with subsequent joint degeneration and deformity. Our study aims to clinically assess the quality of life in hemophilic patients in terms of disease severity and morbidity in our community using the Functional Independence Score for Hemophilia (FISH).

Results

Our cross-sectional study which involved 64 hemophilia patients revealed that the most affected joints were the weight-bearing large joints (knees, elbows, ankles) and this was associated with a lower FISH score. While the total FISH score showed a significant …