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A blood clot in the body
Picture: Alamy/PA Blood clots have always been around - but they re often preventable and treatable. Liz Connor finds out more. Every 37 seconds, someone in the Western world dies from a venous thromboembolism (VTE), where a blood clot forms, most often in the deep veins of the leg, groin or arm. While clotting is a normal process that can prevent us from losing too much blood when wounded, clots that don t dissolve can be dangerous, and even life-threatening in some instances.
The truth about blood clots as one person dies every 37 seconds
Blood clots have become a talking point recently after the MHRA launched investigations into a potential link between AstraZeneca’s Covid vaccine and a spate of blood clotting events
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Every 37 seconds, someone in the Western world dies from a venous thromboembolism (VTE), where a blood clot forms, most often in the deep veins of the leg, groin or arm.
Worried about blood clots? Here’s what you need to know
By Liz Connor
Every 37 seconds, someone in the Western world dies from a venous thromboembolism (VTE), where a blood clot forms, most often in the deep veins of the leg, groin or arm.
While clotting is a normal process that can prevent us from losing too much blood when wounded, clots that don’t dissolve can be dangerous, and even life-threatening in some instances.
Blood clots have also become a talking point recently, after the MHRA launched investigations into a potential link between AstraZeneca’s Covid vaccine and a spate of blood clotting events.