Thrombosis Stocks List

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

Thrombosis Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 20 SNY Sanofi: Information concerning the total number of voting rights and shares - April 2024
May 20 SNY Press Release: Dupixent® late-breaking data from NOTUS confirmatory phase 3 COPD study presented at ATS and published in NEJM
May 20 JNJ Johnson & Johnson's Tremfya meets goals in late-stage trial for ulcerative colitis
May 20 SNY Shah Capital ends campaign against Novavax board after Sanofi deal
May 20 JNJ Pulsed field ablation poised for fast adoption, analysts say
May 20 JNJ J&J posts latest Varipulse data while awaiting FDA review
May 20 AMPH Amphastar Pharmaceuticals: Profitable Pharma With Strong Growth
May 19 JNJ Biopharma M&A surges year over year in Q1
May 19 SNY This Stock Just More Than Doubled in 1 Day: Is It a Buy?
May 18 JNJ Novo Nordisk, J&J lead R&D rankings in big pharma: report
May 18 JNJ Cannabis Meets Prescription Drugs, Steroids And Ketamine In Schedule III: What It Means, Key Stocks To Watch
May 18 JNJ Johnson & Johnson-backed Rapport Therapeutics files for $100M IPO
May 18 SNY Is Novavax Stock a Buy?
May 18 NARI Insider Sale: Director William Hoffman Sells 40,000 Shares of Inari Medical Inc (NARI)
May 17 JNJ Johnson & Johnson Insiders Sell US$6.8m Of Stock, Possibly Signalling Caution
May 17 JNJ J&J-backed startup Rapport files for US IPO
May 17 JNJ J&J (JNJ) to Boost Dermatology Portfolio With New Acquisition
May 17 JNJ Dividend Roundup: Home Depot, Alibaba, Johnson & Johnson, Yum! Brands, and more
May 17 SNY The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Novavax, Sanofi, Fulcrum Therapeutics, Moderna and Bristol Myers
May 17 SNY Could Novavax Become the Next Moderna?
Thrombosis

Thrombosis (from Ancient Greek θρόμβωσις thrómbōsis "clotting”) is the formation of a blood clot inside a blood vessel, obstructing the flow of blood through the circulatory system. When a blood vessel (a vein or an artery) is injured, the body uses platelets (thrombocytes) and fibrin to form a blood clot to prevent blood loss. Even when a blood vessel is not injured, blood clots may form in the body under certain conditions. A clot, or a piece of the clot, that breaks free and begins to travel around the body is known as an embolus.Thrombosis may occur in veins (venous thrombosis) or in arteries. Venous thrombosis leads to congestion of the affected part of the body, while arterial thrombosis (and rarely severe venous thrombosis) affects the blood supply and leads to damage of the tissue supplied by that artery (ischemia and necrosis). A piece of either an arterial or a venous thrombus can break off as an embolus which can travel through the circulation and lodge somewhere else as an embolism. This type of embolism is known as a thromboembolism. Complications can arise when a venous thromboembolism (commonly called a VTE) lodges in the lung as a pulmonary embolism. An arterial embolus may travel further down the affected blood vessel where it can lodge as an embolism.

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