koagulaatioon
Koagulaatioon, or coagulation, is the biological process by which blood forms a clot to seal injuries and prevent excessive bleeding. In many species, it occurs in two coupled stages: primary hemostasis, which forms a platelet plug, and secondary hemostasis, which strengthens the plug with a fibrin mesh. The process is tightly regulated to confine clots to the site of injury and to restore normal blood flow once healing begins.
During primary hemostasis, damaged vessels constrict and expose subendothelial structures. Platelets adhere via von Willebrand factor,
Secondary hemostasis involves a coagulation cascade that converts soluble fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin, stabilizing the plug.
Regulation and dissolution: Antithrombin, protein C and protein S, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor limit clot
Clinical relevance: Defects in coagulation cause bleeding disorders such as hemophilia A or B and von Willebrand