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Thrombus is another word for a blood clot. It forms when there is damage to the [[blood vessel|blood vessel]]. [[Platelets|Platelets]] stick to the damaged vessel, attracted by the exposed [[collagen|collagen]]. The platelets form a platelet plug and stop the external bleeding. Chemicals released from the site attract clotting factors (see [[Clotting Cascade|Clotting Cascade]]) which lead to [[fibrin|fibrin]] formation. The fibrin sticks together and seals the wound forming the blood clot<ref>http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/imagepages/19462.htm</ref>.  
A Thrombus is another word for a blood clot. It forms when there is damage to the [[Blood vessel|blood vessel]]. [[Platelets|Platelets]] stick to the damaged vessel, attracted by the exposed [[Collagen|collagen]]. The platelets form a platelet plug and stop the external bleeding. Chemicals released from the site attract clotting factors (see [[Clotting Cascade|Clotting Cascade]]) which lead to [[Fibrin|fibrin]] formation. The fibrin sticks together and seals the wound forming the blood clot<ref>http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/imagepages/19462.htm</ref>.  


=== References ===
=== References ===


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Revision as of 14:59, 20 October 2016

A Thrombus is another word for a blood clot. It forms when there is damage to the blood vessel. Platelets stick to the damaged vessel, attracted by the exposed collagen. The platelets form a platelet plug and stop the external bleeding. Chemicals released from the site attract clotting factors (see Clotting Cascade) which lead to fibrin formation. The fibrin sticks together and seals the wound forming the blood clot[1].

References