Unit Converter
Fibrinogen

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Key Coagulation Factor – Acute Phase Reactant, Bleeding Risk Marker & Thrombotic Indicator)

Synonyms

  • Fibrinogen
  • Factor I
  • Plasma fibrinogen
  • Coagulation factor I
  • Fibrin clot precursor

Units of Measurement

  • g/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100 mL
  • mg%
  • mg/L
  • µg/mL

Key Conversions

1 g/L = 100 mg/dL
1 mg/dL = 10 mg/L
1 mg/L = 0.001 g/L
1 µg/mL = 1 mg/L
mg/dL = mg% = mg/100 mL

Description

Fibrinogen is a soluble plasma glycoprotein produced by the liver.
It is converted by thrombin into fibrin, which forms the structural mesh of blood clots.

Fibrinogen is essential for:

  • Coagulation
  • Platelet aggregation
  • Wound healing
  • Inflammatory response

It is also a major acute-phase reactant, rising significantly during inflammation and infection.

Physiological Role

  • Final substrate of the coagulation cascade
  • Cleaved into fibrin monomers by thrombin
  • Stabilized by Factor XIIIa to form cross-linked fibrin clot
  • Supports platelet adhesion through GP IIb/IIIa receptors

Clinical Significance

Low Fibrinogen (Hypofibrinogenemia / Afibrinogenemia)

Causes

  1. Liver Disease
    • Cirrhosis
    • Fulminant hepatic failure
  2. DIC (Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation)
    • Massive consumption of clotting factors
  3. Massive Bleeding / Trauma
  4. Congenital Disorders
    • Afibrinogenemia
    • Hypofibrinogenemia
    • Dysfibrinogenemia
  5. Dilutional Coagulopathy
    • Massive transfusion

Clinical Symptoms

  • Prolonged PT / aPTT
  • Poor clot formation
  • Excessive bleeding
  • Oozing from venipuncture sites

Fibrinogen <1.0 g/L (100 mg/dL) = high bleeding risk
Replacement needed (cryoprecipitate or fibrinogen concentrate)

High Fibrinogen (Hyperfibrinogenemia)

Often reflects inflammation, not clotting abnormality.

Causes

  • Acute inflammation
  • Chronic infection
  • Trauma
  • Pregnancy
  • Smoking
  • Metabolic syndrome
  • Obesity
  • Malignancy
  • Post-surgery
  • MI / stroke (risk marker)

Cardiovascular Risk:
High fibrinogen is associated with increased thrombosis risk.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + ISTH + Mayo + ARUP)

Adults

  • 2.0 – 4.0 g/L
    (or 200 – 400 mg/dL)

Pregnancy

  • 3.0 – 6.0 g/L (physiologic increase)

Newborns

  • 1.5 – 3.0 g/L

Critical Values

  • <1.0 g/L → high bleeding risk
  • >7.0 g/L → risk of thrombosis, hyperviscosity (rare)

Diagnostic Uses

1. Coagulation Assessment

  • DIC
  • Liver disease
  • Massive bleeding
  • Trauma-induced coagulopathy

2. Cardiovascular Risk

High fibrinogen associated with:

  • MI
  • Stroke
  • Atherosclerosis

3. Monitoring Anticoagulation & Fibrinolysis

Used in:

  • Fibrinolytic therapy
  • Thrombolysis monitoring
  • Sepsis-related coagulopathy

4. Therapy Guidance

Fibrinogen levels guide:

  • Cryoprecipitate
  • Fibrinogen concentrate (e.g., RiaSTAP)
  • ROTEM/TEG clot firmness assessment

5. Pregnancy Assessment

Low fibrinogen suggests:

  • Placental abruption
  • Severe postpartum hemorrhage risk

Analytical Notes

  • Citrated plasma required
  • Clauss assay = gold standard
  • Immunologic assays measure antigen, not function
  • Heparin therapy may affect results
  • Fibrin degradation products (FDPs) and high D-dimer lower functional fibrinogen

Clinical Pearls

  • In DIC: fibrinogen decreases, D-dimer increases, platelets fall.
  • Fibrinogen is one of the last factors to fall in liver failure.
  • Cryoprecipitate is the fastest way to correct low fibrinogen.
  • High fibrinogen often means inflammation, not hypercoagulation alone.
  • Fibrinogen >6 g/L in pregnancy is common and not pathological.

Interesting Fact

Fibrinogen is one of the largest plasma proteins, with a molecular mass of 340 kDa, and is essential for clot firmness in viscoelastic testing (TEG & ROTEM).

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Coagulation.
  2. ISTH (International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis) Guidelines.
  3. ASCP Coagulation Standards.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Fibrinogen.
  5. ARUP Consult - Coagulation Studies.
  6. WHO Coagulation Factor I Reference Standards.
  7. MedlinePlus / NIH - Fibrinogen Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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