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anticoagulant vs heparin

heparin vs anticoagulant

anticoagulant and heparin both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
anticoagulant Yes No No No
heparin Yes No No No
As nouns, heparin is a hyponym of anticoagulant; that is, heparin is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than anticoagulant:
  • anticoagulant: medicine that prevents or retards the clotting of blood
  • heparin: a polysaccharide produced in basophils (especially in the lung and liver) and that inhibits the activity of thrombin in coagulation of the blood; it (trade names Lipo-Hepin and Liquaemin) is used as an anticoagulant in the treatment of thrombosis and in heart surgery
Other hyponyms of anticoagulant include dicoumarol, dicumarol, Lipo-Hepin, Liquaemin, Coumadin, warfarin.
anticoagulant (noun) heparin (noun)
medicine that prevents or retards the clotting of blood a polysaccharide produced in basophils (especially in the lung and liver) and that inhibits the activity of thrombin in coagulation of the blood; it (trade names Lipo-Hepin and Liquaemin) is used as an anticoagulant in the treatment of thrombosis and in heart surgery
Difference between anticoagulant and heparin

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