Medical geneticists have been claiming that all diseases, whether inherited or infectious, have genetic roots. The causal link, as far as the former category is concerned, is pretty clear. Sickle cell anaemia, for instance, is a disease that is inherited and is caused by a defective amino acid in one of the chains that constitute the globin protein of haemoglobin in our blood. The error is caused by a mutant gene supposed to code for the correct version of the protein. Other such diseases include thalassemia, muscular dystrophy, haemophilia and neurodegenerative afflictions like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases.