Once the pregnancy is established it is not harmful to the baby. The difficulty might occur very early in pregnancy as a new pregnancy is recognised as a foreign body by the mother and protected from being rejected by the pregnancy hormones. If the baby appears too similar it will be recognised as a foreign body but not protected. There is a very long complicated explanation for this but basically if you get over 12 weeks you should be ok. If you keep miscarrying under 12 weeks ask for regerral to specialist center. I am in UK so I am afraid cannot help you more than this.
No, having the same blood type (ABO) will not make a child sick.
If the parents have other, rare genes in common, the child can become sick due to rare inherited disorders. If the parents both have sickle cell anemia, for example, the child might be even sicker than either parent.
Yes. But there are other reasons why a child may not be healthy. Blood groups rarely come into it except where a woman is Rhesus Negative and her husband and baby are Rhesus Positive. In that case, the mother's body will form antibodies which will attack the baby in a subsequent pregnancy. Blood testing is part of routine antenatal screening, and if a woman has a negative Rhesus factor, she will be given several injections of Anti D during and after the pregnancy, which will prevent the antibodies from forming. If a mother's body starts recognising the growing foetus as 'foreign tissue' and starts attacking it, the foetus is said to have erythroblastosis foetalis.
Yes, people with the same blood type have babies all the time.
Yes, of course they can.
They would both have to be heterozygous for their bloodtypes though: AO and BO.
If both parents are O negative than the child will also be O negative. This is a special case with O negative, the same logic doesn't apply to other blood groups.
It is possible if your parents have different blood types. Example, if your father is A with a recessive O, and mother is B with a recessive O, you could easily land up with a O blood group. However, an AB father can have only an A, B or AB child depending on the mothers blood group, but surely NOT 'O.'
It depends on both parents blood groups!
No, the child's blood group would be the same as one of it's parents.
No - children do not have to have the same blood type as the parents. For example, if one parent has blood type A and the other has blood type AB, the child might have A, B or AB blood types. (For the child to have B, the parent with blood type A would need to be heterozygous, Ao)
there is no relation between child personality and life with types of blood either they are the same or different.
If both parents are O negative than the child will also be O negative. This is a special case with O negative, the same logic doesn't apply to other blood groups.
yes
Yes; the child receives a random blood allele from both parents, so unless both parents are type O, AA, or BB, the children can have different blood types
If both parents are O negative, the child can only be O negative, so the mother and child will have the same blood type and there won't be any problem because of that.
yes. even though me and my 4 brothers look alike only 2 of us share the same blood group and both our parents are a-
It may similar or not.If both parents are O.Child is always O.If mother or father is AB,child is A,B or AB.
Not at all.
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.
It is possible if your parents have different blood types. Example, if your father is A with a recessive O, and mother is B with a recessive O, you could easily land up with a O blood group. However, an AB father can have only an A, B or AB child depending on the mothers blood group, but surely NOT 'O.'
Yes if both have the same blood group , the child at birth will have trouble.
If a child does not have the same blood type as either the father or the mother there is nothing to worry about. It is fairly common for a child to have a blood type that combines the blood types of the parents, such as an AB negative child whose parents had A negative and B negative blood.