Factor II deficiency is a disorder of blood clotting (coagulation) resulting from a deficiency of prothrombin.
Alternative Names
Hypoprothrombinemia; Prothrombin deficiency
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Normal blood coagulation is a complex process involving as many as 20 different plasma proteins, which are known as blood coagulation factors. A series of complex chemical reactions involving these factors takes place very rapidly to form an insoluble protein called fibrin that stops bleeding. When certain coagulation factors are deficient or missing, the chain reaction does not take place normally. In this disorder, bleeding ranges from mild to severe.
A congenital factor II deficiency is a very rare inherited disorder that results in deficient blood clotting. It is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait (both parents are carriers). A family history of a
Acquired factor II deficiency is common and results from



