Role of the Extrinsic Pathway of Blood Coagulation in Hemostasis and Thrombosis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Scripps Research Institute
Abstract
Hemostasis requires both platelets and the coagulation system. At sites of vessel injury, bleeding is minimized by the formation of a hemostatic plug consisting of platelets and fibrin. The traditional view of the regulation of blood coagulation is that the initiation phase is triggered by the extrinsic pathway, whereas amplification requires the intrinsic pathway. The extrinsic pathway consists of the transmembrane receptor tissue factor (TF) and plasma factor VII/VIIa (FVII/FVIIa), and the intrinsic pathway consists of plasma FXI, FIX, and FVIII. Under physiological conditions, TF is constitutively expressed by adventitial cells surrounding blood vessels and initiates clotting. In addition so-called…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 107
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Hemostasis
- Tissue factor
- Coagulation
- Platelet
- Thromboplastin
- Fibrin
- Thrombosis
- Antithrombotic
- Good health and well-being