Archive for August 31st, 2005

What Makes Blood Clot?

Wednesday, August 31st, 2005

I was going to post this last night but my internet connection fucked up again.

I’m feeling much much better now. Maybe I’ll feel rotten again later but never mind. I will celebrate it by posting another “Totally Useless Information.” For today’s topic, I will consult the expert once again, Mr. Arkady Leokum, lover of facts, author of the “Tell Me Why” series and a hoarder of freebies like me. I will buy his book “Please Send Me Absolutely Free!” once somebody donates to me. Without further ado, let us know…

What Makes Blood Clot?”

We can’t afford to lose any blood. Even though a healthy person can lose as much as one third of all his blood and still live, a steady loss of blood, or loss of blood while we are sick, would be very dangerous.

Nature has protected us against this danger by giving blood the capacity to clot. If this clotting took place inside our circulatory system, it would be equally dangerous. So blood does not coagulate, or clot, when it is in contact with the smooth walls of the blood vessel. In fact, if blood is poured into a very smooth or lubricated glass vessel, it won’t clot! If you dip a glass rod into blood, it won’t clot either. Yet if you used a wooden rod, clotting would begin!

So it seems that it takes a rough surface, or an injury to the blood vessels, to start the clotting process. The first thing that happens is that very fine threads of a material called fibrin appear in the blood. These threads run every which way and form a kind of network. They entangle all the blood cells like flies in a spider’s web. The blood stream stops moving at this point and is transformed into a kind of swamp of blood cells.

The fibrin threads are firm and very elastic and they hold the blood cells together in a clot. A clot of blood is like a piece of absorbent cotton which nature creates to protect us from loss of blood.

Everybody’s blood clots at a slightly different rate. There are some people whose blood clots very slowly or not at all, and this condition is called hemophilia. It’s a very curious disease because of the way it is transmitted. Hemophilia appears only in men, but it is never transmitted from father to son. It is transmitted from the father to the daughter, who remains healthy, but passes it on to her son. So it’s the grandchild of the sick father who gets the disease!

Probably the most famous example in the history of this disease deals with Queen Victoria of England. Both she and her husband transmitted hemophilia from their ancestors. As a result, six of their great-grandchildren had the disease, and two of these were the Spanish Crown Prince and the son of the last Russian Czar!

I am a bit surprised that Mr. Leokum actually answered the question. Our blood clots because of the fibrin threads! How amazing is that! Mr. Leokum surely loves exclamation points!!! My blood clots at a fast rate. I bet it clots faster than yours, readers! Hah!

Mr. Arkady is kind of a braggart, isn’t he? He goes from blood clotting to hemophilia to royalties! Wow! I bet he was saying to himself, “I am so smart! !!! I will display my vast knowledge by furtheron explaining hemophilia to my ignoramous readers and display my awareness of royal lineage. !!! ” But seriously, I learned a lot from this article. For one, I now know that ‘hemophilia’ is not a sexual perversion but actually a blood disease. I also learned that I would do from steady blood loss. Very dangerous for suicidal persons to know! If I slash my wrists, I will not put wooden rods on the wounds because that will make the blood clot. I should use something made of glass for continuous blood flow. Oh Mr. Arkady Leokum, you are such a teaser!