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Yes. 1. Arrhythmia leads to reduced blood flow for everything... low oxygen. 2. It allows stagnant blood to pool in the heart, creating clots which then can create strokes, heart attacks, lung embolisms and general organ failure.
An embolism occurs when an object moves through the body and eventually blocks off a blood vessel. Thus, a coronary embolism is when an object moves through the body and blocks off a blood vessel in the heart. Embolisms are commonly confused with thrombus (clots). The difference is the embolisms travel. The object can be any one of many things, and the embolism will usually be classified (or named) by the material forming the blockage and where the blockage occurs. These materials include: a clot that has detached from where it formed and traveled elsewhere, cholesterol, fats, bone fragments, air bubbles, pus, small pieces of dislodged tissue, or really anything else that can get into blood vessels and is small enough to move around for a bit.
Hormones travel In the blood because they need to travel in the body.
the blood travel through blood vessels is the Artrium or atria. :-)
Yes, a person can have multiple pulmonary embolisms. They can have many small ones, or just one and can occur in just one lung, or both at the same time.
That is not an easy question to answer. It is quite possible that you have blood clots in your legs, thrombosis. The best thing to do is to ask your doctor.
They travel in the blood. They are one of the 4 components of the blood and they travel collectively
It would likely dislodge a thrombosis; a blood clot that could cause a heart attach
to detect pulmonary embolisms, determine how much blood is flowing to lungs, determine which areas of the lungs are capable of ventilation, and assess how well the lungs are functioning
Red blood cells travel in a liquid called plasma found in the blood vessels.
yes they can create a RHnegative blood type .
Blood cells travel to and from the pump called the heart by way of the blood vessels called the arteries and veins.