It has to do with your genitic make up. You don't have sickle cell anemia because you only have 1 of the traits on your beta hemoglobin gene. People with sickle cell anemia have two.Most of the time peolple with sickle cell trait display much milder symptoms.
It is more prevolent in African Americans and woman should be monitored during pregnancy.
Sickle cell trait is when a person carries one copy of the sickle cell gene and usually does not have symptoms, while sickle cell disease is when a person inherits two copies of the sickle cell gene and can experience severe symptoms such as anemia, pain crises, and organ damage. Sickle cell trait carriers are generally healthy, while those with sickle cell disease require ongoing medical management.
With the genetic trait (from one parent) you don't get anemia but you do get partial immunity to malaria.
With the same trait from both parents you get sickle-cell anemia (lack of oxygen-carrying capability in the blood) which can be deadly.
People who inherit one sickle cell gene are said to have sickle cell trait. This means they carry the gene but do not typically have symptoms of sickle cell disease. It is important for individuals with sickle cell trait to be aware of their status for proper medical management and genetic counseling.
A person with two recessive alleles for sickle cell trait has sickle cell anemia. This genetic condition leads to the production of abnormal hemoglobin, causing red blood cells to become sickle-shaped and leading to various health issues.
Sickle cell trait is a genetic condition where a person carries one abnormal hemoglobin gene and one normal gene. It is an autosomal condition because the gene is located on an autosome (non-sex chromosome) and shows codominance, meaning both alleles are expressed equally in the phenotype, resulting in a mix of normal and abnormal hemoglobin in the individual's red blood cells.
Sickle cell disease is an example of codominance, not heterozygous dominance. In individuals who are heterozygous for the sickle cell allele, they exhibit a milder form of the disease called sickle cell trait, which demonstrates codominance of the normal and mutant hemoglobin alleles.
Yes, the genotype SC refers to individuals who have inherited one sickle cell allele (S) and one C allele, resulting in a sickle cell trait that is different from having sickle cell disease. This genotype can lead to some symptoms similar to sickle cell disease under certain conditions.
in sickle cell trait you don't actually have the disease. you are only able to pass the disease to your kids if you marry a person with sickle cell or that also has the trait. sickle cell disease is when you actually have the disease. you can pass it to your kids if you marry someone with the trait or the disease. if you marry someone without a trait or disease then your kids will most likely have the trait.
No. Having the trait means that you don't actually have the disease.
The person is homozygous for the trait
Yrs
Sickle cell disease is a chronic illness that comes from two parents who have sickle cell trait. This disease can be passed on if both parents have a sickle cell trait & gives that child each trait. The sickle cell trait is important because one must know if he/she is a carrier. If you carry this trait, most likely you will not be sick. It is only when you have children that knowing if you carry the trait is vital. Your child could be born with a painful, chronic, underexposed illness that will require that you have more knowledge than most doctors. Arm yourself with knowledge & get ready for a long fight for justice.
You are born with this trait. If you had both copies, instead of one, you would have the disease. There is no way to get rid of it. Think about any children you have and be sure the person who will be the other parent doesn't carry the trait or have the disease.
The person is homozygous for the trait
Sickle cell anemia is an autosomal recessive disease. Carriers have sickle cell trait, which confers resistance to malaria.
If one parent has sickle cell trait and the other parent has the normal type of hemoglobin, there is a 50% (1 in 2) chance with EACH pregnancy that the baby will be born with sickle cell trait.
People with sickle cell disease, or who carry sickle cell trait, are said to be resistant to malaria.
Sickle cell is not a germ, it's a disease! The spreading of this disease occurs when two people carry the trait of sickle cell in their genetic makeup and they have children. The odds of any child born to parents who carry the trait are different each time. 50% can be born with just trait, 1 out of 4 will be born with Sickle Cell Anemia and 1 out of 4 will be born without anything. Then there are varied levels of Sickle Cell, there's Anemia (SS), Disease (SC). it is heredity
If a person does not carry the Sickle cell trait and they marry some one with the trait. The child that comes from that relationship can never have sickle cell disease, however that child has a chance of having the sickle trait.