Thrombosis is the process of forming a blood clot in a blood vessel. Most of the time, clotting is a normal, healthy process that stops bleeding.
Blood contains cell fragments called platelets. Platelets stick to wounds in our blood vessels and to each other to help form blood clots, or plugs, where damage occurs.
When a blood vessel is injured, it activates a chain reaction of clotting proteins. This creates a protein thread called fibrin that knits together with the platelets to form a clot.
Blood clots can form when we damage the surface of our bodies. You may see this in the form of a scab.
Clots can form internally, too. For example, when tissue inside our bodies gets damaged, we may bleed and clot inside. Normally our bodies dissolve these clots over time, once we no longer need them.
Sometimes clotting in blood vessels can be harmful. Health problems that relate to clots include thrombophilia, deep vein thrombosis and peripheral arterial disease.
People with these diseases tend to form blood clots easily, or to form clots when or where they aren't needed.
This refers to a clot in a vein deep in the body, most often in the lower leg. Lack of movement is one reason for DVT. For example, people who spend many days lying in bed because of illness or surgery may get a clot in one of their legs.
Peripheral arterial disease is a reduction of blood flow in the small arteries, most often in the legs. This disease is more common in older people who have some other health problem that makes their arteries narrow over time. A clot can be another reason for reduced blood flow here.
Any time a clot forms inside the body, there is some risk that it may be so big it blocks blood flow through a blood vessel.
Also, there is some risk that the clot may break free from the place where it formed. Then it will flow through the blood vessels until it reaches a vessel that's too narrow to pass through. There the clot can get lodged and block blood flow.
Blockage of blood flow can be serious, even deadly. Here are some problems that relate to clots that block a vessel:
Pulmonary embolism is blockage of a blood vessel in the lungs when a clot travels to the lungs from elsewhere.
One reason for a stroke is a clot that blocks a vessel to the brain.
One reason for a heart attack is a clot that blocks a vessel to the heart.
A blood clot can form in a blood vessel any time there's bleeding inside the body. Risk may be higher after heavy bleeding, such as after a major injury or surgery, because the clotting system may be especially active at that time.
Some other health matters or lifestyle choices may increase risk, too, mainly in adults. For example, cigarette smoking and obesity increase the risk.
Women are at greater risk for blood clots when they are pregnant because the weight of the baby presses on veins in the belly. This reduces blood flow from the legs through the belly back to the heart. Also, the levels of many clotting factors are naturally higher in pregnant women.
These health problems may increase risk of the thrombosis disease thrombophilia:
People who do not move their legs much, such as people who must stay in bed, have greater risk for deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Long airplane rides and car rides also pose a risk of DVT because sitting decreases blood flow from the legs somewhat.
To find a clot and check its response to treatment, we use special ultrasound or X-ray testing.
Here are some of the common treatments for blood clots:
Some children with blood clotting problems need treatment only on a short-term basis. Others may need lifelong treatment. This depends on the reason for the clots.
Your child's doctor can talk with you in more detail about your child's clots and the best way to care for them. We will also work with your child's other doctors to coordinate your child's care.
At Children's Hospital, we offer a full range of services to diagnose and treat thrombosis. If your child has a problem with clots, our doctors can give a number of treatments, based on the cause.
In many cases, parents find out their child has thrombophilia when someone else in the family gets a clot and then the child is tested.
Even if the child has never had a clot, we can provide helpful services.
For example, we can help assess the child's risk for a clot, counsel the family about the effects of thrombophilia, and suggest steps to reduce the chance of clots in high-risk situations, such as surgery.
Read more about our experience and treatment of blood diseases through our Hematology Program.