The Hemostasis Trilogy (Steps 1–3)
Coagulation, Factors & Pathways
Clot Retraction, Fibrinolysis & Control
Disorders of Hemostasis
Blood Typing & Transfusion Reactions
100

This fast, localized response constricts a damaged vessel to limit blood flow.

What is vascular spasm?


100

Both intrinsic and extrinsic pathways lead to activation of this clotting factor.

What is Factor X?


100

During clot retraction, platelets contract using these proteins.

What are actin and myosin

100

A clot that forms in an unbroken vessel is called this.

What is a thrombus

100

Type O blood can be given to most recipients because it lacks these RBC markers.

What are A and B antigens

200

Pain reflexes, endothelial chemicals, and smooth muscle injury all trigger this step.

What is vasoconstriction during vascular spasm?


200

The intrinsic pathway is triggered by surfaces with this charge.

What is a negative charge (collagen, activated platelet phospholipids, glass)

200

The inactive form of the fibrin-digesting enzyme is called this.

What is plasminogen

200

A thrombus that breaks free and travels in the bloodstream becomes this.

What is an embolus

200

People with type AB blood are universal recipients because they lack these.

What are anti-A and anti-B antibodies

300

Platelet activation releases these three substances that intensify aggregation.

What are ADP, serotonin, and thromboxane A₂

300

The extrinsic pathway is initiated by release of this substance from damaged tissues.

What is Tissue Factor (Factor III)?

300

This enzyme converts plasminogen into plasmin.

What is tPA (tissue plasminogen activator)?


300

Platelet count <150,000/µL leads to this condition, often causing petechiae.

What is thrombocytopenia

300

Anti-Rh antibodies do NOT form spontaneously; they form only after this event.

What is exposure to Rh+ blood?


400

This protein unfolds and helps platelets adhere to exposed collagen.

What is von Willebrand factor (VWF)


400

Thrombin converts this soluble protein into insoluble fibrin.

What is fibrinogen

400

This molecule inactivates thrombin that escapes the clot.

What is antithrombin III?


400

Hemophilia A results from deficiency of this clotting factor.

What is Factor VIII

400

This condition occurs when an Rh– mother carries an Rh+ fetus in a second pregnancy.

What is erythroblastosis fetalis?


500

Coagulation reinforces the platelet plug with these structural protein strands.

What are fibrin threads

500

To stabilize the clot, thrombin and Ca²⁺ activate this factor which cross-links fibrin.

What is Factor XIII (fibrin stabilizing factor)?

500

These two endothelial substances prevent platelet adhesion under normal conditions.

What are nitric oxide (NO) and prostacyclin?

500

Vitamin K deficiency or cirrhosis can impair clotting because the liver cannot produce these.

What are procoagulants (clotting factors)?

500

During a transfusion reaction, donor RBCs clump because the recipient’s plasma contains these.

What are agglutinins (antibodies)?

M
e
n
u