Alpha Thalassemia Center - Yonkers, NYYonkers Hematologist Doctors for Alpha ThalassemiaType 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 Yonkers *![]() A G Khakee MD ![]() Montefiore Medical Center Department of Medicine ![]() Montefiore Medical Center ![]() JJ Peters Bronx VA Medical Center ![]() Mary Reed MD & Zwi Schreiber MD ![]() Jacobi Medical Center Hematology ![]() Robert M Bookchin MD ![]() Montefiore Medical Center ![]() Bronx Psychiatric Center ![]() Options for Wellness ![]() Hematology Associates ![]() Hematology Associates ![]() Hematology Associates ![]() Arthur L Ossias MD ![]() Drs Vogel & Greenberg ![]() Drs Gruenstein Wisch & Klafter ![]() Stemline Therapeutics Inc ![]() Randy L Levine MD ![]() Ellen Ritchie MD ![]() Roger S Keresztes MD ![]() MSKCC Leukemia Service ![]() MSKCC Bone Marrow Transplant Service ![]() MSKCC Lymphoma Service ![]() MSKCC Hematology ![]() MSKCC Leukemia Service ![]() MSKCC Bone Marrow Transplant Service ![]() MSKCC Leukemia Service ![]() MSKCC Leukemia Service ![]() MSKCC Breast Cancer Medicine ![]() New York Presbyterian Center for Lymphoma & Myeloma ![]() MSKCC Hematology ![]() MSKCC Lymphoma Service ![]() MSKCC Lymphoma Service ![]() MSKCC Bone Marrow Transplant Service ![]() MSKCC Lymphoma Service ![]() MSKCC Leukemia Service ![]() Barry S Coller MD ![]() Weill Cornell Breast Center ![]() Weill Cornell Medical College Dept of Pathology ![]() Eli J Kleinman MD ![]() NYU Medicial Center Division of Hematology ![]() NYU Medicial Center Division of Hematology ![]() Fazlul Yusuf MD ![]() Queens Medical Associates ![]() Ariel Distenfeld MD ![]() Queens Medical Associates ![]() Phyllis S Hyde MD ![]() Drs Patel Rai Russo & Mehrotra ![]() Arena Oncology Associates PC ![]() Lab Corps ![]() Barry Wenz MD ![]() MSKCC at Suffolk Outpatient Center ![]() MSKCC at Suffolk Outpatient Center ![]() Stony Brook University Cancer Center Oncology ![]() New York Oncology Hematology PC Yonkers, New YorkUpcoming Local Events2012-05-20
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Alpha and Beta ThalassemiaRead the Alpha and Beta Thalassemia article » 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 ThalassemiaHeart attack facts
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Nearby Yonkers Hospitals *![]() Saint Joseph's Medical Center ![]() St John's Riverside Hospital ![]() Lawrence Hospital Center ![]() North Division of Montefiore Medical Center ![]() Mount Vernon Hospital ![]() North Central Bronx Hospital ![]() Montefiore Medical Center ![]() Englewood Hospital & Medical Center ![]() James J Peters VA Medical Center ![]() New York Presbyterian Allen Pavilion ![]() St Barnabas Hospital ![]() Jacobi Medical Center ![]() Dobbs Ferry Pavillion @ St Johns Riverside Hospital ![]() Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester ![]() Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center Concourse Division ![]() Jack D Weiler Hospital ![]() Calvary Hospital ![]() Holy Name Hospital ![]() New York Presbyterian Columbia Campus ![]() New York State Psychiatric Institute ![]() Bronx Psychiatric Center ![]() New York Westchester Square Medical Center ![]() Bronx Children's Psychiatric Center ![]() Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center Fulton Division ![]() MMC South Bronx Health Center ![]() Lincoln Medical & Mental Health Center ![]() Bergen Regional Medical Center ![]() Harlem Hospital Center ![]() Rockland Psychiatric Center ![]() Hackensack University Medical Center ![]() Manhattan Psychiatric Center ![]() North General Hospital ![]() St Lukes Hospital ![]() The Burke Rehabilitation Hospital ![]() Rockland Children's Psychiatric Center ![]() Select Specialty Hospital Northeast New Jersey ![]() White Plains Hospital Center ![]() The Mount Sinai Medical Center ![]() New York Presbyterian Westchester ![]() Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation Saddle Brook ![]() Metropolitan Hospital Center ![]() St Vincent's Hospital Westchester ![]() Palisades Medical Center ![]() Maria Fareri Children's Hospital ![]() Westchester Medical Center ![]() The Valley Hospital ![]() Blythedale Children's Hospital ![]() The Mount Sinai Hospital of Queens ![]() Rye Hospital Center ![]() Nyack Hospital ![]() Phelps Memorial Hospital Center ![]() Lenox Hill Hospital ![]() Coler Specialty Hospital & Nursing Facility ![]() Gracie Square Hospital ![]() Hospital for Special Surgery ![]() Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center ![]() New York Presbyterian Weill Cornell Campus ![]() Manhattan Eye Ear & Throat Hospital ![]() The Rockefeller University Hospital ![]() St Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center ![]() St Mary's Hospital ![]() Goldwater Specialty Hospital & Nursing Facility ![]() Elmhurst Hospital Center ![]() Flushing Hospital Medical Center ![]() Meadowview Psychiatric Hospital ![]() Meadowlands Hospital Medical Center ![]() New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens ![]() Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine ![]() NYU Langone Medical Center ![]() Bellevue Hospital Center ![]() St Joseph's Children's Hospital ![]() St Joseph's Regional Medical Center ![]() VA New York Harbor Healthcare System New York Campus ![]() Forest Hills Hospital ![]() NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases Featured Articles*Provider Directory Terms of Use: The WebMD 'Provider Directory' is provided by WebMD for use by the general public as a quick reference of information about Providers. The Provider Directory is not intended as a tool for verifying the credentials, qualifications, or abilities of any Provider contained therein. Inclusion in the Provider Directory does not imply recommendation or endorsement nor does omission in the Provider Directory imply WebMD disapproval. |













































































