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  2. Coagulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coagulation

    The division of coagulation in two pathways is arbitrary, originating from laboratory tests in which clotting times were measured either after the clotting was initiated by glass, the intrinsic pathway; or clotting was initiated by thromboplastin (a mix of tissue factor and phospholipids), the extrinsic pathway.

  3. Thromboplastin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thromboplastin

    Therefore, although the coagulation cascade can be triggered in vitro through the intrinsic pathway only, in vivo coagulation is triggered by the extrinsic pathway. However, the model better describing how coagulation works is the so-called cell-based model, a more integrated picture of the whole process, in which phospholipid surfaces, such as ...

  4. Tissue factor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue_factor

    Together with factor VIIa, tissue factor forms the extrinsic pathway of coagulation. This is opposed to the intrinsic (amplification) pathway, which involves both activated factor IX and factor VIII. Both pathways lead to the activation of factor X (the common pathway), which combines with activated factor V in the presence of calcium and ...

  5. Extrinsic pathway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrinsic_pathway

    The extrinsic pathway of apoptosis refers to cell death induced by external factors that activate the death-inducing signaling complex. The extrinsic pathway of blood coagulation is also known as the tissue factor pathway and refers to a cascade of enzymatic reactions resulting in blood clotting and is done with the addition of injured tissue ...

  6. Factor X - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factor_X

    Traditional models of coagulation developed in the 1960s envisaged two separate cascades, the extrinsic (tissue factor (TF)) pathway and the intrinsic pathway. These pathways converge to a common point, the formation of the Factor Xa/Va complex which together with calcium and bound on a phospholipids surface, generate thrombin (Factor IIa) from ...

  7. High-molecular-weight kininogen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-molecular-weight...

    HMWK is one of four proteins which interact to initiate the contact activation pathway (also called the intrinsic pathway) of coagulation: the other three are Factor XII, Factor XI and prekallikrein. HMWK is not enzymatically active, and functions only as a cofactor for the activation of kallikrein and factor XII. It is also necessary for the ...

  8. Tenase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenase

    In coagulation, the coagulation factor X can be activated into factor Xa in two ways: either extrinsically or intrinsically. The activating complexes are together called tenase . Tenase is a blend word of "ten" and the suffix "-ase", which means, that the complex activates its substrate (inactive factor X) by cleaving it.

  9. Prothrombin time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prothrombin_time

    The prothrombin time is the time it takes plasma to clot after addition of tissue factor (obtained from animals such as rabbits, or recombinant tissue factor, or from brains of autopsy patients). This measures the quality of the extrinsic pathway (as well as the common pathway) of coagulation.