Haemostasis stops bleeding at the site of vascular injury and maintains the integrity of blood vessels through clot formation. This regulated physiological process consists of complex interactions between endothelial cells, platelets, von Willebrand factor and coagulation factors. Haemostasis is initiated by a damaged vessel wall, followed with a rapid adhesion, activation and aggregation of platelets to the exposed subendothelial extra cellular matrix. At the same time, coagulation factors aggregate on the procoagulant surface of activated platelets to consolidate the platelet plug by forming a mesh of cross-linked fibrin. Platelets and coagulation mutually influence each other and there are strong indications that, thanks to the interplay...
AbstractPlatelet aggregation to form a haemostatic plug, or thrombus, plays a key role in preventing...
Platelet adhesion and aggregation at the site of vascular injury are two key events in hemostasis an...
Platelet activation and blood coagulation are two processes often studied separately, but which cann...
Haemostasis stops bleeding at the site of vascular injury and maintains the integrity of blood vesse...
normal situation, platelets circulate freely and do not attach to the smooth endothelial lining of b...
Hemostasis is a physiologic mechanism that maintains blood in a fluid state within the circulation. ...
Versteeg HH, Heemskerk JWM, Levi M, Reitsma PH. New Fundamentals in Hemostasis. Physiol Rev 93:327-3...
Hemostasis is one of many well-known systems that ensure a constant conditions of the organism's int...
Platelets interact with the coagulation system in a multitude of ways, not only during the phases of...
Hemostasis is a complex physiological process aiming to keep the integrity of a closed circulatory s...
The hemostatic system comprises platelet aggregation, coagulation and fibrinolysis also termed prima...
The integrity of the circulation is maintained through the provision of a rapid, potent, but tightly...
Acute thrombus formation is the pathophysiological substrate underlying several clinical conditions,...
We examined how neutrophils, platelets and erythrocytes interact with each other under coagulating f...
AbstractA mathematical model of the extrinsic or tissue factor (TF) pathway of blood coagulation is ...
AbstractPlatelet aggregation to form a haemostatic plug, or thrombus, plays a key role in preventing...
Platelet adhesion and aggregation at the site of vascular injury are two key events in hemostasis an...
Platelet activation and blood coagulation are two processes often studied separately, but which cann...
Haemostasis stops bleeding at the site of vascular injury and maintains the integrity of blood vesse...
normal situation, platelets circulate freely and do not attach to the smooth endothelial lining of b...
Hemostasis is a physiologic mechanism that maintains blood in a fluid state within the circulation. ...
Versteeg HH, Heemskerk JWM, Levi M, Reitsma PH. New Fundamentals in Hemostasis. Physiol Rev 93:327-3...
Hemostasis is one of many well-known systems that ensure a constant conditions of the organism's int...
Platelets interact with the coagulation system in a multitude of ways, not only during the phases of...
Hemostasis is a complex physiological process aiming to keep the integrity of a closed circulatory s...
The hemostatic system comprises platelet aggregation, coagulation and fibrinolysis also termed prima...
The integrity of the circulation is maintained through the provision of a rapid, potent, but tightly...
Acute thrombus formation is the pathophysiological substrate underlying several clinical conditions,...
We examined how neutrophils, platelets and erythrocytes interact with each other under coagulating f...
AbstractA mathematical model of the extrinsic or tissue factor (TF) pathway of blood coagulation is ...
AbstractPlatelet aggregation to form a haemostatic plug, or thrombus, plays a key role in preventing...
Platelet adhesion and aggregation at the site of vascular injury are two key events in hemostasis an...
Platelet activation and blood coagulation are two processes often studied separately, but which cann...