People from the Outer Hebrides and north-west Ireland have the highest risk of developing a genetic disease that causes a ...
New research maps genetic “hotspots” for hemochromatosis, revealing uneven risk and possible underdiagnosis across the UK and Ireland.
A large population-genetics study has revealed that people with ancestry from the Outer Hebrides, Northern Ireland and north-west Ireland face the highest risk of hereditary haemochromatosis, ...
Scientists have mapped the highest-risk areas for haemochromatosis, known as the 'Celtic Curse', with people from the Outer ...
People from the northwest of Ireland have the highest risk in the British Isles of developing a genetic disease that causes a ...
Scientists have revealed the areas across the UK and Ireland that are hotspots for the 'Celtic Curse'. Otherwise known as ...
Anne Campbell says being diagnosed with a genetic disease in her 80s came as a relief.
The condition has been nicknamed the ‘Celtic curse’ because it disproportionately affects people of Celtic ancestry.
Major study finds Liverpool residents are significantly more at risk of developing haemochromatosis, a genetic condition ...
One in 54 people in the north west of Ireland carry a gene leaving them at risk of developing a disease that causes a dangerous build-up of iron in the body, known as the Celtic curse, according to a ...
A new study has shown which parts of the UK are at highest risk of developing the genetic disease, which is dubbed the "Celtic Curse", and can lead to serious illness if untreated ...