What are anticoagulants?
Anticoagulants are medications that help prevent abnormal blood
clotting. They work by increasing the time it takes a blood clot to form.
Normally, when an injury that causes bleeding occurs, the body sends out
signals that cause the blood to clot at the wound, and the clot naturally
breaks down as the wound heals. A person prone to abnormal clotting has an
imbalance between clot formation and clot breakdown. Anticoagulant medications
prevent new clots from forming and prevent existing clots from growing
(extending) by stopping the production of certain proteins that are necessary
for blood to clot. However, they do not break up or dissolve existing blood
clots.
Test Your Knowledge
Answer the following question to see whether you understand what
anticoagulants do.
Anticoagulants break up blood clots.
- True
- False
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Why are anticoagulants important for deep vein thrombosis?
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Taking anticoagulants for deep vein thrombosis