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Author Topic:   Thrombocytopenia
Emmy posted 1/1/05 9:02 PM    
Platelets are tiny, disk-shaped elements that help your blood to clot. Regardless of cause, severe thrombocytopenia results in a typical pattern of bleeding: multiple petechiae in the skin, often most evident on the lower legs; scattered small ecchymoses at sites of minor trauma; mucosal bleeding (epistaxis, bleeding in the GI and GU tracts, vaginal bleeding); and excessive bleeding after surgery. Platelets play a critical initiating role in the hemostatic system. Platelets, or thrombocytes, are a specific kind of blood cell that prevent bleeding. Thrombocytopenia may either result from a failure of platelet production and/or an increased rate of removal from blood. People with thrombocytopenia can have excessive bleeding. Heavy GI bleeding and bleeding into the CNS may be life threatening. Primary hemostasis begins when platelets adhere to the site of endothelial disruption, leading to platelet clumping.

Thrombocytopenia

Emmy
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