Blood clots (anticoagulants) are the substances given to patients before surgery or after bleeding, to help the body stop hemorrhage.

There is a range of diseases that occur as a result of blood clotting, in which the body faces difficulty in stopping bleeding, leading to bleeding of the injured person for a long time when exposed to a wound.

You may also have bleeding in the joints, especially the elbow, ankle and knee, as well as the possibility of internal bleeding may affect vital organs such as the brain, and this may lead to complications that may lead to death.

Examples of these diseases are hemophilia, which in Arabic is called hemophilia.

There are several types of clotting factor concentrates, such as:

  • Factor VIII.

  • Agent von Willebrand.

  • Factor IX.

  • Factor factor overflow factor FEIBA-NF)

  • Factor 13.

  • Factor 11.

  • Center of fibrinogen.

These substances are injected intravenously into a specific concentration, in a certain way, in a specific quantity, depending on the condition of each patient. Since the blood clotting process is composed of several stages, the given medication must compensate for the deficiency in the specific stage of blood clotting.