-The normal aging process alters blood coagulation system in humans; this may be of great concern in the view of the known association of vascular disease with advancing age. The plasma concentration of several coagulation factors, namely fibrinogen, factor VII, factor VIII, factor IX, high molecular-weight kininogen, and prekallikrein, increase in healthy humans, paralleling the physiological aging process. Plasma parameters of clotting activation in vivo, such as prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, fibrinopeptide A, thrombin-antithrombin III complex, and D-dimer, are positively correlated with age. Nevertheless, among centenarians, biochemical signs of marked hypercoagulability are associated with a healthy state. Natural anticoagulants, including antithrombin III, heparin cofactor II, protein C, protein S, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor, can modulate the reactions of blood coagulation system. The occurrence of menopause is accompanied by a significant increase in antithrombin III plasma level; the mean antithrombin III levels in older women exceed levels in male contemporaries. In healthy elderly subjects heparin cofactor II plasma concentrations are lower than in young subjects, independently of gender. Protein C levels raise with age in both sexes, as well as free protein S levels. In women, statistically significant increases in the plasma concentration of the tissue factor pathway inhibitor have been observed, whereas no significant age-related change has been found in men. The fact that many subjects with congenital defects of natural anticoagulants do not undergo thromboembolic events in young age suggests that in healthy individuals a raise in natural anticoagulants can balance the age-related increase of procoagulant factors.