Influence of Antithrombin on the Regimes of Blood Coagulation: Insights from the Mathematical Model

Acta Biotheoretica 64 (4):327-342 (2016)
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Abstract

Blood coagulation is regulated through a complex network of biochemical reactions of blood factors. The main acting enzyme is thrombin whose propagation in blood plasma leads to fibrin clot formation. Spontaneous clot formation is normally controlled through the action of different plasma inhibitors, in particular, through the thrombin binding by antithrombin. In the current study we develop a mathematical model of clot formation both in quiescent plasma and in blood flow and determine the analytical conditions on the antithrombin concentration corresponding to different regimes of blood coagulation.

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