Every bruise results in minor bleeding and a small blood clot. A blood clot is the body's natural way to stop bleeding and heal the site. If you mean cause a dangerous clot, a bruise is not in a vein. It is more a superficial injury. The only way a clot is dangerous is if it can travel to the heart or brain. Bruises don't cause clots that will travel.
Sort of - yes. A hematoma, aka contusion, aka bruise is when blood escapes from a broken blood vessel and is visible under the skin. The blood in the tissue will clot.
If the bruise is large, and has a clot under it, the clot can move to sensitive areas of the body (lungs, Heart, brain) and cause further damages: stroke, heart attack etc.
Yes, rubbing a bruise can make it worse. It encourages circulation, which will make the bruise bleed under your skin more. It can also spread around the blood that has already pooled in the area. At the worst, if there is a clot present, it can cause it to move.
No, a blood clot does not cause bruising. Bruising occurs when small blood vessels under the skin break and leak blood, while a blood clot is a clump of blood that forms in a vein or artery.
Quitting smoking will not cause you to suffer a blood clot. You can, of course, still have a blood clot, but it will not happen as a result of your failure to smoke.
A blood clot that blocks an artery to the brain can cause a stroke. If the clot blocks blood flow to the lungs pulmonary embolism can occur. A blood clot that blocks a coronary artery can cause a heart attack.
White blood cells help clot the blood. Low PH makes red blood cells clump together
what cause fryball
A large pulmonary thromboembolism (blood clot) may lead to acute cor pulmonale
It is a disease where the blood does not clot. Victims bruise easily from very mild touch and can easily bleed to death from minor cuts or scrapes.
It is possible.
When you forcibly strike the body hard enough to leave a bruise, you break capillaries under the skin. The blood leaks into surrounding tissue. Any time there is bleeding, even on the inside of the body, a clot forms to stop the bleed. A small clot under a bruise just means your body did its job to begin the very first steps toward healing.