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Antithrombin III is in the normal range, providing adequate natural protection against excessive clotting.
Antithrombin III is one of the most important natural blood thinners in your body. Critically low levels mean clotting is happening unchecked, which can lead to life-threatening clots in veins and arteries throughout the body.
Seek emergency care immediately. Blood-thinning treatment therapy is urgently needed.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — critically low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Low Antithrombin III significantly raises your risk of blood clots. It can be inherited or acquired through liver disease, nephrotic syndrome, heparin use, or sepsis. This is one of the most important clotting risk factors.
Your doctor needs to investigate the cause. You may need heparin resistance evaluation and possibly long-term blood-thinning treatment.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — below reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Your Antithrombin III is nudging below normal. Even modest deficiency in this protein increases clotting risk, particularly during pregnancy, surgery, or prolonged immobility.
Discuss with your doctor, especially if you have other clotting risk factors.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline lowAntithrombin III is in the normal range, providing adequate natural protection against excessive clotting.
No action needed. This aspect of your clotting system is healthy.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference rangeYour Antithrombin III is in the optimal range. You have strong natural protection against abnormal blood clot formation.
Excellent result.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimalA marginally elevated Antithrombin III is not clinically significant. High levels don't cause bleeding problems and are usually benign.
No action required.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline elevatedElevated Antithrombin III is not associated with bleeding disorders. It can be seen in inflammation or certain medications and is usually not clinically significant.
No treatment required. Discuss with your doctor at your next visit.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A very high Antithrombin III is rare and its clinical significance is unclear. It does not typically cause bleeding but may interfere with heparin therapy.
Discuss with a hematologist. Repeat testing may be warranted.
Antithrombin III: {{value}} {{unit}} — significantly elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.