We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.
Parental information:
Yes because my daughter is a neg and her husband is o pos and my grandson is a pos
If the father is A neg and the mother O pos is the mother in any danger?
Well of corse they can. anything is possible they just have to put there mind to it!
They can have a baby with type O blood but not Rh negative.. The baby would have to be O pos
No.
This is an incorrect answer. My husband and I both have O+ blood, as do our oldest two children. Our twins actually have O-blood, though.
rarely but it can
No. It is not possible for a child to have A if the parents are O blood type. If both parents have type O blood, then their children will also have type O blood. However, two parents with type A or type B blood (both the same or one of each) can sometimes have a child with type O blood. That is because the gene for type O blood is recessive. But they must carry the O type. However, two parents with type AB blood can have a child with type A, type B, or type AB blood, but cannot have a child with type O blood.
both parents carried the recessive gene for type O blood. the baby then inherited 2 recessive genes and received type O blood. the reason the parents didn't have type O blood is because they carried genes that were more dominant.
No, two type O parents can only have type O children. See the table below from www.dna-bioscience.co.uk/did_you_know_abo.shtml If you look at the row for mother's blood type O where it intersects with the column for father's blood type O, you will see that the child's blood type must be O. For the child to be Rh+, only one of the parents has to be Rh+.
Parents of blood type O can only have children with blood type O. Because type O is recessive, you know that the parents are homozygous O.
They could, but they don't need to. Both of your parents must have at least one O allele, meaning neither can have type AB blood. They must be either BO, AO or OO to produce a child with type O blood.
Only if it was adopted...the only options for that child's blood type would be A or O if the biological parents are both Type A.
Yes. Both parents could be heterozygous, that is AO, and pass on the O to their child.
No, the child has to have one of the parents blood type.
If the parents had the genotypes AO and BO, then they could have a child with Type O blood (there would be a 25% chance of this occurring).
No.
I assume the question is "Is it possible for two parents with type B blood to have a child with type O blood?" Yes they can, if both parents have BO genotype. The chance of the child having O blood is 25% in this case. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type
No. It is not possible for a child to have A if the parents are O blood type. If both parents have type O blood, then their children will also have type O blood. However, two parents with type A or type B blood (both the same or one of each) can sometimes have a child with type O blood. That is because the gene for type O blood is recessive. But they must carry the O type. However, two parents with type AB blood can have a child with type A, type B, or type AB blood, but cannot have a child with type O blood.
If both parents had heterozygous blood-type genes, then the child could inherit the recessive O type from each parent. Suppose the mother had the genes for A and O, and the father had the genes for B and O. They would then have blood-types A and B respectively. Depending on which parts were passed to the child, any blood type would be possible.
It is hard to tell if your blood type is dominate and your partners blood type is recessive them the child could have O positive blood, but if your blood type is recessive and your partners blood type is dominate then the child could have O negative. Sometime the child could get a completely different blood type eve if their parents do not have it. There is no way you can tell.
The child's blood type is determined by his or her parents' blood types. If both parents have type A, the child can have either type A or O. If both parents have type B, the child can have either type B or O. If one parent has type A and the other parent has type B, the child can have type A, B, AB, or O, but he/she is most likely to have type AB. If both parents have type O, the child will have type O.
You could have several children with different blood types. you get your blood type from either parents or even grand parents.
If both parents are type O blood they will only have type O children