The
first suggestion to solve the Heir's medical riddle wasn't made until
1913. Behind the Veil of the Russian Court proposed
that the Tsarevich had hæmophilia. There was a rumour that the
disease existed in the Royal Houses of Europe, passed down by Queen
Victoria of England. Since Alix was Victoria's maternal granddaughter,
everyone guessed that she must have given it to Alexei.
People have followed this story, and it is repeated in many textbooks written about the Romanovs. However, nothing was ever actually diagnosed. A prognosis couldn't even be given as the child's case was too involved and not understood fully. In old medical textbooks under hæmophilia one will only find something similar to "The Last Tsarevich of Russia was thought to have this disease."
It would be nice if it was that clear cut, but to this day in the 21st century a proven diagnosis does not exist. The puzzlement is that Alexei had a few symptoms that hæmophilia simply cannot answer. One of the most convincing was that Alexei's disease was episodic. He went months, and even a whole year without any problems worth writing home about. Hæmophilia is ever present, the body lacks the clotting factor it needs for the blood, making every injury dangerous. Alexei rumbled, tumbled, stubbed his toes, got his fingers caught, and endured many other childhood bruises.. but not all of them haemhorraged. He wasn't fighting for his life with every stumble. Take a look at every serious attack, and it is noted that Alexei was generally feeling under the weather along side the bleeding problem. Each time his immune system was down, say with a cold, he seemed at further risk of reacting badly to an injury. His temperature would rise, saying that his body was very plainly trying to fight off an infection of some kind. Extremely high fevers led to delerium, a trait of the Central Nervous System. None of this is consistant with hæmophilia. The greatest mystery was the fact that sometimes
Alexei's attacks would occur some time after the initial injury. A
perfect example is the Spala Episode, it took weeks for that attack
to fully flare after his accident in the boat. In laymen's terms,
hæmophilia just doesn't do that. That disease acts right upon
the injury, it doesn't fester for weeks.
Nor does a hæmophiliac attack suddenly disapate as quickly as it begins. Alexei's recovery in 1912 was quite spontaneous. The results were temporary crippling, but he was well on the road to recovery only a few hours from when it seemed all was lost.
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