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  2. Fibrinogen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrinogen

    Fibrinogen is made and secreted into the blood primarily by liver hepatocyte cells. Endothelium cells are also reported to make small amounts of fibrinogen, but this fibrinogen has not been fully characterized; blood platelets and their precursors, bone marrow megakaryocytes, while once thought to make fibrinogen, are now known to take up and store but not make the glycoprotein.

  3. Dysfibrinogenemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysfibrinogenemia

    Tranexamic acid or fibrinogen concentrates are recommended for prophylactic treatment prior to minor surgery while fibrinogen concentrates are recommended prior to major surgery with fibrinogen concentrates usage seeking to maintain fibrinogen activity levels at >1 gram/liter. Women undergoing vaginal or Cesarean child birth should be treated ...

  4. Congenital hypofibrinogenemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congenital_hypofibrinogenemia

    Individuals that do have fibrinogen storage disease often come to attention either because they have close relatives with the disease, are found to be hypofibrinogenemic during routing testing, or exhibit clinical (e.g. jaundice) or laboratory (e.g. elevated blood levels of liver enzymes) evidence of liver disease. Unlike other forms of ...

  5. Fibrinoid necrosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrinoid_necrosis

    Fibrinoid necrosis is a pathological lesion that affects blood vessels, and is characterized by the occurrence of endothelial damage, followed by leakage of plasma proteins, including fibrinogen, from the vessel lumen; these proteins infiltrate and deposit within the vessel walls, where fibrin polymerization subsequently ensues.

  6. Fibrin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrin

    Hereditary abnormalities of fibrinogen (the gene is carried on chromosome 4) are both quantitative and qualitative in nature and include afibrinogenaemia, hypofibrinogenaemia, dysfibrinogenaemia, and hypodysfibrinogenemia. Reduced, absent, or dysfunctional fibrin is likely to render patients as hemophiliacs.

  7. Hypodysfibrinogenemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypodysfibrinogenemia

    Initial laboratory findings include a decrease in serum fibrinogen mass levels as measured by immunoassay plus a reduction in inducible blood clot formation so that the ratio of functionally-detected fibrinogen mass (i.e. detected in induced clots) to immunoassay-detected fibrinogen mass is abnormally low, i.e. <0.7. This contrast with ...

  8. List of fibrinogen disorders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fibrinogen_disorders

    Acquired dysfibrinogenemia, a disorder in which normal levels of fibrinogen are composed at least in part of a dysfunctional fibrinogen due to an acquired disorder (e.g. liver disease) that leads to the synthesis of an incorrectly glycosylated (i.e. wrong amount of sugar residues) added to an otherwise normal fibrinogen. The incorrectly ...

  9. Primary fibrinogenolysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_fibrinogenolysis

    Primary fibrinogenolysis is the pathological lysis of fibrinogen characterized with a low fibrinogen, high fibrin degradation products, prolonged prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time, a normal platelet count and absence of microcirculatory thrombosis.