** Hemophilia is found on the X chromosome, which the male carries. However, this does not mean that a woman cannot have the life threatening disease, such as hemophilia. Although the disorder is found on the X chromosome, that doesn't mean that only the male is a factor of the genetic outcome. Women still play a big role in the genetic chain.
**There is always a 50/50% chance of hemophilia being passed through to children in any pregnancy. If you have a non-carrier mother and an affected father, the child will not be affected by hemophilia.
**With a carrier mother and a non hemophiliac father, the chances of a male child being affected are 25% on both scales, meaning it is 25% possible to be affected and 25% possible to be unaffected. same goes for the female offspring. There is a 25% chance that the female will/will not be a carrier of hemophilia.
**The combination of a carrier mother and a father affected by hemophilia has a broad outcome of both male and female either being affected or not being affected. This has the same outcome as the previous scenario. (25% across the board)
**The offspring of a mother with hemophilia and a father with hemophilia gives the child being conceived a 50% chance of being hemophiliac and a 50% chance of being unaffected by hemophilia, for both male and female.
**When a mother that has hemophilia and a father that is a non-hemophiliac father have children, the chances of their offspring having hemophilia is 50% resulting in a female carrier and 50% of the male being affected.
**There is always a 50/50% chance of hemophilia being passed through to children in any pregnancy. If you have a non-carrier mother and an affected father, the child will not be affected by hemophilia.
**With a carrier mother and a non hemophiliac father, the chances of a male child being affected are 25% on both scales, meaning it is 25% possible to be affected and 25% possible to be unaffected. same goes for the female offspring. There is a 25% chance that the female will/will not be a carrier of hemophilia.
**The combination of a carrier mother and a father affected by hemophilia has a broad outcome of both male and female either being affected or not being affected. This has the same outcome as the previous scenario. (25% across the board)
**The offspring of a mother with hemophilia and a father with hemophilia gives the child being conceived a 50% chance of being hemophiliac and a 50% chance of being unaffected by hemophilia, for both male and female.
**When a mother that has hemophilia and a father that is a non-hemophiliac father have children, the chances of their offspring having hemophilia is 50% resulting in a female carrier and 50% of the male being affected.