enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Disseminated intravascular coagulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disseminated_intravascular...

    Fibrinogen level was initially thought to be useful in the diagnosis of DIC but because it is an acute phase reactant, it will be elevated due to the underlying inflammatory condition. Therefore, a normal (or even elevated) level can occur in over 57% of cases. A low level, however, is more consistent with the consumptive process of DIC.

  3. Hyperfibrinolysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperfibrinolysis

    Bleeding is caused by the generation of fibrinogen degradation products which interfere with regular fibrin polymerization and inhibit platelet aggregation. Moreover, plasmin which is formed in excess in hyperfibrinolysis can proteolytically activate or inactivate many plasmatic or cellular proteins involved in hemostasis.

  4. Thrombin time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrombin_time

    This test is repeated with pooled plasma from normal patients. The difference in time between the test and the 'normal' indicates an abnormality in the conversion of fibrinogen (a soluble protein) to fibrin, an insoluble protein. [2] The thrombin time compares the rate of clot formation to that of a sample of normal pooled plasma.

  5. 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.

  6. Fibrin degradation product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrin_degradation_product

    If your body is unable to dissolve a clot, you may have abnormal levels of FDPs. The most notable subtype of fibrin degradation products is D-dimer. The levels of these FDPs rise after any thrombotic event. Fibrin and fibrinogen degradation product (FDP) testing is commonly used to diagnose disseminated intravascular coagulation. [2]

  7. D-dimer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-dimer

    D-dimer formation. Shown are fibrinogen, with its one E domain and two D domains, acted upon in cascade, by the following enzymes: Thrombin, to create a mesh of fibrin protofibrils; Factor XIII to crosslink the fibrin mesh (linking protofibril D domains), the scaffold for clot formation; Plasmin, whose action in fibrinolysis produces fibrin degradation products (FDPs), the smallest of which ...

  8. Dysfibrinogenemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysfibrinogenemia

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

  9. Fibrinolysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrinolysis

    FDPs compete with thrombin, and thus slow down clot formation by preventing the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin. This effect can be seen in the thrombin clotting time (TCT) test, which is prolonged in a person that has active fibrinolysis. FDPs, and a specific FDP, the D-dimer, can be measured using antibody-antigen technology. This is more ...