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Also reported in: g/L
Normal fibrinogen means your blood has adequate clotting protein to form proper clots when needed, without being excessively prone to clot formation. This balance is important both for preventing excessive bleeding and for not generating unnecessary blood clots in the arteries or veins.
Fibrinogen is a critical clotting protein that your body converts to fibrin to form blood clots and stop bleeding. A very low fibrinogen level means your blood has very impaired ability to clot, creating dangerous risk of uncontrolled bleeding from even minor injuries. This can occur with noticeable liver disease, disseminated intravascular coagulation, or massive bleeding.
This needs urgent medical attention. Seek immediate hospital care — very low fibrinogen requires urgent evaluation and possible fibrinogen replacement.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — very low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; critical: <100)Low fibrinogen means reduced capacity to form blood clots. When fibrinogen falls below normal, wounds take longer to stop bleeding and surgical or traumatic bleeding becomes harder to control. Low fibrinogen can occur with liver disease, rare inherited conditions, or consumption during a clotting event.
Discuss with your doctor. Additional clotting tests and liver function evaluation are typically needed to identify the cause.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A borderline low fibrinogen still allows reasonably normal clotting in most circumstances, but it provides a narrower safety margin for situations involving significant bleeding or surgical procedures. It may reflect mild liver dysfunction, certain inherited variants, or dietary protein insufficiency.
Monitor this and discuss with your doctor. Avoid NSAIDs and blood thinners until further assessment is done.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Normal fibrinogen means your blood has adequate clotting protein to form proper clots when needed, without being excessively prone to clot formation. This balance is important both for preventing excessive bleeding and for not generating unnecessary blood clots in the arteries or veins.
Normal result. No action needed for fibrinogen specifically.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — normal (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Optimal fibrinogen means clotting function is well-calibrated — enough to stop bleeding from injuries while not creating excess clotting risk in the cardiovascular system. Fibrinogen in this range is also associated with lower cardiovascular inflammatory risk, as chronically elevated fibrinogen contributes to arterial plaque instability.
Excellent result. Maintain anti-inflammatory lifestyle habits to keep fibrinogen in the optimal range.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimal (ref: 220–350)A borderline elevated fibrinogen begins to contribute to increased blood viscosity and a slightly more clot-prone state in the blood. It is also an acute-phase inflammatory protein, meaning it rises with chronic low-grade inflammation. Elevated fibrinogen is associated with modestly higher risk of cardiovascular events over time.
Address underlying inflammation through diet, exercise, and smoking cessation. Repeat testing in 3–6 months to monitor the trend.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; borderline: 400–500)Elevated fibrinogen thickens the blood and makes it more prone to forming dangerous clots in arteries and veins. It is both a clotting risk factor and an inflammatory marker. Chronically high fibrinogen is associated with increased risk of heart attack, stroke, and deep vein a clot forming. Common may contribute to include chronic inflammation, smoking, metabolic syndrome, and autoimmune conditions.
Discuss with your doctor. Addressing the root cause of inflammation is the primary treatment. Anti-inflammatory strategies and lifestyle changes are first-line approaches.
Fibrinogen: {{value}} {{unit}} — elevated (ref: {{low}}–{{high}}; elevated: >400)A very high fibrinogen above 700 mg/dL signals very large blood thickening and clotting risk. This level is associated with major acute inflammatory states, noticeable infection, sepsis, active autoimmune disease, or very large physiological stress. The blood becomes noticeably more viscous and the risk of arterial or venous clot formation is noticeably elevated.
Seek medical evaluation urgently. The underlying cause of very large fibrinogen elevation must be identified and treated immediately to prevent serious clotting 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.