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Alpha Thalassemia Center - Winston-Salem, NC

Winston-Salem Hematologist Doctors for Alpha Thalassemia

Type of Physician: Hematologist

What is a Hematologist?

A subspecialty certification by the Board of Internal Medicine or Pathology; Hematologists treat diseases of the blood, spleen, and lymph glands such as anemia, clotting disorders, sickle cell disease, hemophilia, leukemia, and lymphoma. They perform special types of transfusions and biopsy the bone marrow for analysis.

Specialty: Hematology

Common Name: Blood Doctor

Hematologist Doctors in Winston-Salem *

Matthews Hematology Oncology Associates
Richard S Foulke
3036 Senna Dr
Matthews, NC 28105
(704) 841-8151

Duke University Medical Center
Michael Colvin
2100 Erwin Rd DUMC 3814
Durham, NC 27710
(919) 620-4467

DUMC Hematology & Oncology
Phillip Febbo
Duke University Medical Ctr
DUMC 3382
Durham, NC 27710
(919) 684-8964

Duke University Medical Center Hematology
William H Kane
200 Trent Dr BOX 3656
Stead Bldg RM RM 0563
Durham, NC 27710
(919) 684-5350

Duke University Medical Center Hematology
Thomas L Ortel
200 Trent Dr BOX 3656
Stead Bldg RM RM 0563
Durham, NC 27710
(919) 684-5350

Seby B Jones Regional Cancer Center
Theodore F Gray
184 Virginia St
Boone, NC 28607
(828) 262-4344

Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Winston-Salem is a city in the U.S. state of North Carolina. Winston-Salem is the county seat and largest city of Forsyth County and the fourth-largest city in the state. Winston-Salem is the second largest municipality in the Piedmont Triad region and is home to the tallest office buildings in the region, such as 100 North Main Street. It is called the "Twin City" for its dual heritage, or "Camel City", a reference to Camel cigarettes and the city's prominent tobacco industry; some locals use "Winston" in informal speech. Winston-Salem is home to three universities and one college: Wake Forest University, a nationally distinguished private university, Winston-Salem State University, a historically-black university founded in 1892, the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, and Salem College, a four-year liberal arts college for women.
(Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winston-Salem,_North_Carolina)

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Alpha and Beta Thalassemia

What are thalassemias?

Thalassemias (thal-a-SE-me-ahs) are inherited blood disorders. "Inherited" means they're passed on from parents to children through genes.

Thalassemias cause the body to make fewer healthy red blood cells and less hemoglobin (HEE-muh-glow-bin) than normal. Hemoglobin is an iron-rich protein in red blood cells. It carries oxygen to all parts of the body. It also carries carbon dioxide (a waste gas) from the body to the lungs, where it's exhaled.

People who have thalassemias can have mild or severe anemia (uh-NEE-me-uh). This condition is caused by a lower than normal number of red blood cells or not enough hemoglobin in the red blood cells.

What Causes Thalassemias?

Your body makes three types of blood cells: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets (PLATE-lets). Red blood cells contain hemoglobin, an iron-rich protein that carries oxygen from your lungs to all parts of your body. Hemoglobin also carries carbon dioxide (a waste gas) from your body to your lungs to be exhaled.

Hemoglobin has two kinds of protein chains: alpha globin and beta globin. If your body doesn't make enough of these protein chains, red blood cells don't form properly and can't carry enough oxygen. Your body won't work well if your red blood cells don't make enough healthy hemoglobin.

Genes control how the body makes hemoglobin protein chains. When these genes are missing or altered, thalassemias occur.

Thalassemias are inherited disorders. That is, they're passed on from parents to their children through genes. People who get abnormal hemoglobin genes from one parent but normal genes from the other are called carriers. Carriers often have no signs of illness other than mild anemia. However, they can pass the abnormal genes on to their children.

People with moderate to severe forms of thalassemia have inherited abnormal genes from...

Recommended Reading Related to Alpha Thalassemia

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Emergency Contact for Winston-Salem

  • In case of Emergency, call 911
  • Police (808) 529-3111
  • Fire (808) 723-7139

Nearby Winston-Salem Hospitals *

Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Medical Center Blvd
Winston Salem, NC 27157
(336)716-2255

Medical Park Hospital
1950 S Hawthorne Rd
Winston Salem, NC 27103
(336)718-0785

Forsyth Medical Center
3333 Silas Creek Pkwy
Winston Salem, NC 27103
(336)718-5000

High Point Regional Health System
601 N Elm St
High Point, NC 27262
(336)878-6000

Thomasville Medical Center
207 Old Lexington Rd
Thomasville, NC 27360
(336)472-2000

Lexington Memorial Hospital
250 Hospital Dr
Lexington, NC 27292
(336)248-5161

Davie County Hospital
223 Hospital St
Mocksville, NC 27028
(336)751-8100

Wesley Long Community Hospital
501 N Elam Ave
Greensboro, NC 27402
(336)832-1000

Moses Cone Behavioral Health Center
700 Walter Reed Dr
Greensboro, NC 27403
(336)832-9600

The Women's Hospital of Greensboro
801 Green Valley Rd
Greensboro, NC 27408
(336)832-6500

Hoots Memorial Hospital
624 W Main St
Yadkinville, NC 27055
(336)679-2041

Stokes Reynolds Memorial Hospital
1570 NC 8 & 89 N
Danbury, NC 27016
(336)593-2831

The Moses H Cone Memorial Hospital
1200 N Elm St
Greensboro, NC 27401
(336)832-7000

Kindred Hospital Greensboro
2401 Southside Blvd
Greensboro, NC 27406
(336)271-2800

Rowan Regional Medical Center
612 Mocksville Ave
Salisbury, NC 28144
(704)210-5000

WG Bill Hefner VA Medical Center
1601 Brenner Ave
Salisbury, NC 28144
(704)638-9000

Northern Hospital of Surry County
830 Rockford St
Mount Airy, NC 27030
(336)719-7000

Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital
180 Parkwood Dr
Elkin, NC 28621
(336)527-7000

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