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Why Blood Clots Are Stretchy
Coppedge, D. 2008.  CM 13(2):9-10. CELD ID 22612

Abstract
A team of biophysicists at University of Illinois ran a computation for six months to find out why blood clots are stretchy. The primary protein in the clot, fibrinogen, can stretch two to three times its resting size. By studying the force on every atom in the protein, ScienceDaily said, they produced a force curve that matches the force measured on actual fibrinogen.