8. MECHANISM OF BLOOD CLOTTING

Mechanism of Blood Clotting

Introduction

Blood clotting, or coagulation, is a natural defense process that prevents excessive bleeding when a blood vessel is injured.
It is a complex chain reaction involving platelets, clotting factors, calcium ions, and fibrin.
This process converts liquid blood into a gel-like clot, sealing the wound until healing occurs.

Definition

Blood clotting (Coagulation) is defined as:

“The process by which blood changes from a liquid to a solid state to prevent blood loss after injury.”

Importance of Blood Clotting

  • Prevents excessive blood loss from injuries.
  • Provides a temporary seal for damaged vessels.
  • Starts the healing process by stabilizing the wound.
  • Protects the body from infection through exposed tissues.

Main Steps in Blood Clotting Mechanism

The process of coagulation occurs in three major stages:


1. Formation of Prothrombin Activator

When a blood vessel is injured:

  • Platelets stick to the damaged site and release thromboplastin (or prothrombin activator).
  • Calcium ions (Ca²⁺) and clotting factors (especially Factor X and V) are required.
  • The thromboplastin helps convert prothrombin into thrombin in the next step.

Pathways involved:

  • Intrinsic Pathway: Initiated by damage to blood vessels and exposure of collagen.
  • Extrinsic Pathway: Initiated by external trauma that causes blood to escape the vascular system.
  • Both pathways converge to form prothrombin activator.

2. Conversion of Prothrombin to Thrombin

  • Prothrombin, a plasma protein made in the liver, is converted into thrombin, an active enzyme.
  • This step requires calcium ions and prothrombin activator.
  • Reaction:
    Prothrombin + Thromboplastin + Ca²⁺ → Thrombin

3. Conversion of Fibrinogen to Fibrin

  • Thrombin acts on fibrinogen (a soluble plasma protein) and converts it into fibrin (an insoluble protein).
  • Fibrin threads form a mesh-like network that traps blood cells and platelets, creating a solid clot.
  • Reaction:
    Fibrinogen → (Thrombin) → Fibrin

The fibrin network then contracts and hardens, pulling the edges of the wound closer to speed up healing.


Clot Retraction and Repair

After the clot is formed:

  • Platelets contract, shrinking the clot (clot retraction).
  • This draws the damaged vessel edges together.
  • Fibroblasts and endothelial cells begin tissue repair.

Fibrinolysis (Clot Removal)

Once the vessel heals, the clot is no longer needed.

  • Plasminogen (inactive form) is converted to plasmin (active enzyme).
  • Plasmin dissolves fibrin and removes the clot.
  • This process is called fibrinolysis.

Essential Substances Involved in Clotting

  1. Calcium ions (Ca²⁺) – Required at multiple steps of clotting.
  2. Vitamin K – Needed for synthesis of prothrombin and other clotting factors in the liver.
  3. Clotting Factors (I–XIII) – Specialized proteins that act in sequence (cascade).
  4. Platelets – Initiate clot formation by releasing thromboplastin.

Clotting Time

  • Normal clotting time: 3 to 8 minutes.
  • Prolonged clotting time indicates deficiency of clotting factors, calcium, or vitamin K.

Disorders Related to Blood Clotting

  1. Hemophilia: Genetic disorder where one or more clotting factors are missing.
  2. Thrombosis: Formation of an unwanted clot inside a blood vessel.
  3. Embolism: Dislodged clot blocking blood flow elsewhere in the body.
  4. Vitamin K Deficiency: Leads to poor synthesis of clotting factors.
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