The blue character of Troublesome Creek sounds like the title of a novel, but Blue Fugates is not a fictitious character, but they are real people. Blue Fugates is a very close family living near the Troublesome Creek in eastern Kentucky. French orphan, Martinin Fugate settled in Troublesome Creek Surprisingly, Martin has managed to find a woman who somehow has the same very rare illness. A later discovered disease is methemoglobinemia, which is a very rare hereditary hematological disorder caused by genetic inheritance as a simple recessive allele.
Dr. Madison Cawein, a hematologist at the University of Kentucky Medical Center, heard about the blues of Troublesome Creek. He tried to find blue people around the hazard in Kentucky, but when Cavan went to a dangerous clinic on that day, it wasted to Patrick and Rachel Ridge, brothers and sisters and blue people. He checked to see that brothers and sisters did not have heart disease, and he started asking their families and other blue people. He found a descendant of Martin Foote.
Dr. Carouin, Troublesome Blue Man and Treat Kentucky Blues use methylene blue to repair damaged hemoglobin. That is, methylene blue is its reduced colorless, water-soluble molecule. It becomes blue when it is oxidized. The bluish tint giving urine is the last sentence of the article by Kathy Trost "The last blue is known to have disappeared from the skin". Deeny can use vitamin C in Ireland. Repair the same effect of damaged hemoglobin. However, since vitamin C is colorless, there is no emission of blue pigment.
The blue population of Troublesome Creek suffers from methemoglobinemia, a state of metabolism affecting hemoglobin. Hemoglobin is a four-part protein that carries oxygen in combination with iron atoms in the core of each subunit. Like my recent post on the Deaf community in Martha's Vineyard, this is the story of an autosomal recessive disorder that disappears with time as the descendants of the original carrier couple leave their hometown. Because the Chilmark community is very deaf, everyone is using their local sign language. According to sparse literature on them, the Kentucky family has not experienced such acceptance. Their blue tone is a genetic badge of incest.