Page 151 - The Cell in 40 Topics
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Harun Yahya - Adnan Oktar
As this accumulation thickens, it will halt the flow of blood by acting
as a stopper. What we refer to as a scab is the stopper that forms in this way
(Figure 116).
The blood clot is absorbed when the wound is fully healed.
The system that ensures the formation of a clot, that determines the
extent of that clot, and that strengthens or eliminates it is of irreducible
complexity. Blood clotting is a chain of events in which one event sets an-
other in motion.
The system functions flawlessly, right down to the tiniest detail.
What would happen in the event of the slightest impairment to that
system? What, for instance, would occur if clotting took place in the ab-
sence of any wound? Or if the clot that formed were easy to detach from the
injury? In that event, the arteries leading to such vital organs as the heart,
lungs and brain would become clogged up with clotting materials, and this
would inevitably result in death.
Figure 116.
Thrombocytes set up a network
consisting of fibrinogen threads.
Other become caught up in the
web and accumulate, thus halting
the bleeding by acting as a patch
or a stopper.
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