Oh I've been bleeding profusely for 6 years (I'm female). It doesn't stop bleeding. Ferritin is tanking and so are my hemoglobins. I was bleeding for 5 years thick blood and easier to stop but now that it is thin and watery, I can sit on the toilet and listen to it come out of me like a faucet. My blood has lost it's ability to clot. But it seemed I clotted better when blood was more viscous. Now I can't get up without it rushing out and from sides of my pants. I don't wear pants any more. Just a garbage bag around me as I shift from bed to toilet. I know the nonstop bleeding is a progesterone issue and most likely my naturopath detoxed estrogen into my blood stream when he used glutathione on me. But only this past year the blood became like water after I used activated charcoal, colloidal silver, and black seed oil. I had a protruding gut so I assumed my bleeding was caused by sulfuric property of glutathione. I was wrong, the protruding gut was my inflamed uterus from too much estrogen. I have progesterone coming in but this will not fix the wateriness of my blood. I know those three products changed the iron or the calcium status of my blood. Taking the calcium has definitely changed the colour but I think my thyroid is not allowing me to take large doses or an imbalanced dose. I have taken iron to initiate a change, but it didn't do much. So calcium should be a higher ratio than magnesium?
calcium : magnesium should be whatever ratio is good for you. in general a 2:1 ratio seams favorable but that doesnt apply to everyone. i do not tolerate calcium at all no matter the ratio.
what you describe doesnt sound like a problem of too "thin" blood. (it might be aggravating because if more viscosity it doesnt flow as easy and then might clot easier.)
this sounds like a more serious disturbance in blood coagulation.
the first thing which comes to mind is higher dose of vitamin K1 (not k2). also whatever other cofactors are required for coagulation (sadly i dont know).
and you probably shouldnt take aspirin under that conditions.
also what can make your blood more "thin" is histamine and allergic reactions, that can be endogenous production or from external sources. every time your body releases histamine it also releases heparin.
EDIT:
so according my follow up reply, calcium is crucial for formation of stable blood clots.
so if lack of calcium is your issue, than taking calcium might help or even better, taking vitamin D will help because it increases calcium absorption and calcium in your body.
so in your case if calcium is the issue, vitamin D would improve clotting aka make it more and not less.
so i would recommend taking vitamin D, vitamin K1 and K2mk4 and let the body regulate itself.
you might provide a bit of calcium and magnesium to help the regulation but maybe not do high doses or concentrate on food rich in those.