hemostase
Hemostasis, or hemostase, is the physiological process that stops bleeding following a blood vessel injury. It involves a rapid sequence of events that stabilize the damaged site and allow tissue repair: a local vascular constriction, formation of a platelet plug (primary hemostasis), activation of the coagulation cascade to generate a fibrin clot (secondary hemostasis), and eventually fibrinolysis to remove the clot as healing occurs.
Vasoconstriction reduces blood flow; platelets adhere to exposed subendothelial collagen via von Willebrand factor, become activated,
The coagulation cascade consists of intrinsic and extrinsic pathways that converge on the activation of thrombin,
Endothelial cells regulate hemostasis by releasing antiplatelet and anticoagulant factors, such as nitric oxide, prostacyclin, thrombomodulin,
Disorders include bleeding disorders (hemophilia A and B, von Willebrand disease) and thrombotic conditions (antithrombin deficiency,