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Bleeding risk

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рдЕрднреА рдЯреЗрд╕реНрдЯ рд╢реБрд░реВ рдХрд░реЗрдВ

bleeding risk

Bleeding risk describes how likely someone is to have unwanted bleeding, from easy bruising to more serious internal hemorrhage. ItтАЩs influenced by many factors, including blood-thinning medications, certain health conditions, older age, recent surgery, and the health of the liver and kidneys. Some medicines that prevent clots or reduce platelet function raise bleeding risk, and inherited or acquired problems with clotting factors can also increase it. The risk can be minor, like more bruises or nosebleeds, or major, such as heavy bleeding that needs a hospital visit, transfusion, or surgery. Understanding individual bleeding risk helps doctors choose treatments, set safe medication doses, and plan procedures. Managing that risk often means balancing the chance of bleeding against the benefit of preventing dangerous blood clots or other problems. Steps to reduce risk include regular monitoring of blood tests when needed, adjusting medications, treating underlying conditions, and avoiding unnecessary use of other medicines that increase bleeding. People should tell healthcare providers about all drugs and supplements they take and watch for warning signs like persistent bleeding, large bruises, black or bloody stools, or blood in urine.

Bleeding risk | Visual Field Test