Similarities between Thrombin and Vasoconstriction
Thrombin and Vasoconstriction have 4 things in common (in Unionpedia): Artery, Endothelium, Hemostasis, Thrombin.
Artery
An artery (plural arteries) is a blood vessel that takes blood away from the heart to all parts of the body (tissues, lungs, etc).
Artery and Thrombin · Artery and Vasoconstriction ·
Endothelium
Endothelium refers to cells that line the interior surface of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels, forming an interface between circulating blood or lymph in the lumen and the rest of the vessel wall.
Endothelium and Thrombin · Endothelium and Vasoconstriction ·
Hemostasis
Hemostasis or haemostasis is a process which causes bleeding to stop, meaning to keep blood within a damaged blood vessel (the opposite of hemostasis is hemorrhage).
Hemostasis and Thrombin · Hemostasis and Vasoconstriction ·
Thrombin
Thrombin (fibrinogenase, thrombase, thrombofort, topical, thrombin-C, tropostasin, activated blood-coagulation factor II, blood-coagulation factor IIa, factor IIa, E thrombin, beta-thrombin, gamma-thrombin) is a serine protease, an enzyme that, in humans, is encoded by the F2 gene.
The list above answers the following questions
- What Thrombin and Vasoconstriction have in common
- What are the similarities between Thrombin and Vasoconstriction
Thrombin and Vasoconstriction Comparison
Thrombin has 76 relations, while Vasoconstriction has 108. As they have in common 4, the Jaccard index is 2.17% = 4 / (76 + 108).
References
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