(HealthDay News) — Blood clotting is the body’s way of preventing excessive bleeding when a blood vessel is injured.
Typically, the body will dissolve the clot after the injury has healed,
the American Society of Hematology says.
But occasionally, a clot forms despite no obvious injury to a vessel, or the clot doesn’t dissolve on its own. This can pose the dangerous possibility of limiting oxygenated blood to tissues and organs such as the heart or lungs.
Or a clot may impede the flow of deoxygenated blood back to the heart.
The society says factors that can increase the risk of developing a blood clot include:
- Obesity.
- Pregnancy.
- Prolonged inactivity.
- Smoking
- Some oral contraceptives.
- Certain cancers.
- Surgery.
- Advancing age.
- Family history of blood clots.
- Diabetes.
- High blood pressure.
- High cholesterol.
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