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Also reported in: g/L
Normal fibrinogen means adequate clotting capacity is present without excess blood-thickening inflammatory protein in circulation. Fibrinogen is both a clotting factor and an acute-phase inflammatory reactant — normal levels suggest no significant inflammatory activation and adequate hemostatic reserve.
Very low fibrinogen means the blood has very impaired clotting ability. Fibrinogen is consumed during disseminated intravascular coagulation, destroyed in noticeable liver failure, or reduced in hereditary afibrinogenemia. At this level, uncontrolled bleeding from injuries or surgical sites is a serious danger.
Medical emergency. Seek immediate hospital care. Fibrinogen replacement therapy and management of the underlying coagulopathy are required.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — very low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; critical: <100)Low fibrinogen means reduced clotting capacity. Bleeding takes longer to control, and surgical risk is elevated. Causes include liver disease, consumptive coagulopathy, hereditary fibrinogen disorders, or high-dose blood-thinning treatment. Low fibrinogen as an inflammatory marker suggests the liver's production is impaired rather than that inflammation is high.
Discuss with your doctor. Full coagulation panel and liver function assessment are needed. Avoid NSAIDs and unnecessary invasive procedures.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A borderline low fibrinogen provides a slightly narrower safety margin for clotting during significant bleeding events. Mild fibrinogen reduction can occur with early liver disease, hereditary variants, high omega-3 intake, or consumption during minor inflammatory events. In the absence of other coagulopathy, this level is usually manageable.
Monitor. Discuss with your doctor if you are planning any surgical procedures. Avoid blood-thinning supplements.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Normal fibrinogen means adequate clotting capacity is present without excess blood-thickening inflammatory protein in circulation. Fibrinogen is both a clotting factor and an acute-phase inflammatory reactant — normal levels suggest no significant inflammatory activation and adequate hemostatic reserve.
Good result. Normal fibrinogen supports both healthy clotting and normal blood viscosity.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — normal (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Optimal fibrinogen in the 220–350 mg/dL range reflects adequate clotting capability without excess inflammatory protein thickening the blood. This range is associated with the lowest cardiovascular inflammatory risk from fibrinogen, normal hemostasis, and appropriate acute-phase response capacity.
Excellent result. Maintain anti-inflammatory lifestyle to keep fibrinogen in this balanced range.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimal (ref: 220–350)A borderline elevated fibrinogen is a common finding reflecting mild background inflammation. As an acute-phase reactant, fibrinogen rises with chronic low-grade inflammation from metabolic syndrome, smoking, physical inactivity, or subclinical infections. It also mildly thickens the blood, contributing to elevated cardiovascular risk over time.
Address underlying inflammatory drivers. Anti-inflammatory lifestyle, smoking cessation, and weight management help lower fibrinogen. Recheck in 3–6 months.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; borderline: 400–500)Elevated fibrinogen above 500 mg/dL indicates significant inflammatory activation or a major acute-phase response. High fibrinogen thickens the blood, increases clot formation risk in arteries and veins, and reflects underlying inflammatory disease. Common may contribute to include autoimmune diseases, major infection, cardiovascular disease, and noticeable metabolic syndrome.
Medical evaluation is needed. Identify and treat the underlying inflammatory cause. Elevated fibrinogen is an independent cardiovascular risk factor requiring management.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; elevated: >500)A very high fibrinogen above 700 mg/dL reflects very large inflammatory activation or acute-phase response. Blood at this level is noticeably hyperviscous and at very high risk of arterial and venous a clot forming. This level is seen in noticeable sepsis, major trauma, very large autoimmune crises, or massive inflammatory events.
Seek urgent medical evaluation. The cause of very large fibrinogen elevation must be identified and treated immediately to prevent life-threatening thrombotic complications.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — very high (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; critical: >700)Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.