Platelet Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Platelet stocks.

Platelet Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 5 AMGN Cathie Wood's Ark Invest Snaps Up $3.54M Worth Of Shares In This Biopharma Company Following Positive Obesity Pipeline Update
May 5 DCPH Wall Street Breakfast: The Week Ahead
May 3 AMGN Why Amgen Stock Zoomed Nearly 12% Higher Today
May 3 TTOO T2 Biosystems Q1 Earnings Preview
May 3 AMGN Amgen's peek at its GLP-1 drug trial results heightens competition in obesity market
May 3 AMGN Analyst unveils Amgen stock price target after weight-loss drug data
May 3 AMGN Amgen's Q1 Earnings: Solid All Court Progress, Major Weight Loss Catalyst Pending
May 3 AMGN Interest rate cuts could switch ‘from stroll to a sprint’ after US jobs surprise
May 3 AMGN William Blair, Barclays upgrade Amgen following GLP-1 drug update
May 3 AMGN Top Midday Stories: Apple's Dividend, Buybacks Announcements; Amgen Obesity Drug Trial Results; Exxon Completes Pioneer Acquisition
May 3 AMGN US STOCKS-Wall St rallies after soft jobs data allays rate jitters
May 3 AMGN Amgen (AMGN) Q1 Earnings Top, Stock Up on Obesity Drug Update
May 3 AMGN Weight-loss drug competition heats up. Is Wegovy in trouble?
May 3 AMGN Amgen Inc. (NASDAQ:AMGN) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 AMGN Dow Jones Soars 400 Points As Amgen, Apple Surge; Nvidia Jumps Again, Tempts New Buyers
May 3 CERS Cerus Corporation (NASDAQ:CERS) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 AMGN US STOCKS-Wall St gains after soft jobs data allays rate jitters
May 3 AMGN Amgen stock rallies 13% on GLP-1 weight-loss drug update
May 3 AMGN Amgen Knocks Novo Nordisk's Ozempic Stock Rally
May 3 AMGN Amgen Posts Upbeat Results, Joins OneSpan, Paylocity Holding, MercadoLibre And Other Big Stocks Moving Higher On Friday
Platelet

Platelets, also called thrombocytes (from Greek θρόμβος, "clot" and κύτος, "cell"), are a component of blood whose function (along with the coagulation factors) is to react to bleeding from blood vessel injury by clumping, thereby initiating a blood clot. Platelets have no cell nucleus: they are fragments of cytoplasm that are derived from the megakaryocytes of the bone marrow, and then enter the circulation. Circulating unactivated platelets are biconvex discoid (lens-shaped) structures, 2–3 µm in greatest diameter. Platelets are found only in mammals, whereas in other animals (e.g. birds, amphibians) thrombocytes circulate as intact mononuclear cells.

On a stained blood smear, platelets appear as dark purple spots, about 20% the diameter of red blood cells. The smear is used to examine platelets for size, shape, qualitative number, and clumping. The ratio of platelets to red blood cells in a healthy adult ranges from 1:10 to 1:20.
One major function of platelets is to contribute to hemostasis: the process of stopping bleeding at the site of interrupted endothelium. They gather at the site and unless the interruption is physically too large, they plug the hole. First, platelets attach to substances outside the interrupted endothelium: adhesion. Second, they change shape, turn on receptors and secrete chemical messengers: activation. Third, they connect to each other through receptor bridges: aggregation. Formation of this platelet plug (primary hemostasis) is associated with activation of the coagulation cascade with resultant fibrin deposition and linking (secondary hemostasis). These processes may overlap: the spectrum is from a predominantly platelet plug, or "white clot" to a predominantly fibrin, or "red clot" or the more typical mixture. Some would add the subsequent retraction and platelet inhibition as fourth and fifth steps to the completion of the process and still others a sixth step wound repair. Platelets also participate in both innate and adaptive intravascular immune responses.
Low platelet concentration is called thrombocytopenia, and is due to either decreased production or increased destruction. Elevated platelet concentration is called thrombocytosis, and is either congenital, reactive (to cytokines), or due to unregulated production: one of the myeloproliferative neoplasms or certain other myeloid neoplasms. A disorder of platelet function is a thrombocytopathy.
Normal platelets can respond to an abnormality on the vessel wall rather than to hemorrhage, resulting in inappropriate platelet adhesion/activation and thrombosis: the formation of a clot within an intact vessel. This type of thrombosis arises by mechanisms different than those of a normal clot: namely, extending the fibrin of venous thrombosis; extending an unstable or ruptured arterial plaque, causing arterial thrombosis; and microcirculatory thrombosis. An arterial thrombus may partially obstruct blood flow, causing downstream ischemia, or may completely obstruct it, causing downstream tissue death.

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