It depends if you are A pos or A neg. If you are A pos, you can receive A pos, A neg, O pos, and O neg. If you are A neg, you can receive A neg, or O neg. The reason for this is that if you are A neg and receive Rh positive blood, it is possible you may develop an Anti-D antibody (Rh antibody)which would cause you to have a reaction to further transfusion of Rh positive units.
The donor types from which you can receive a blood donation depend on what blood type you have.
Type O can get blood from Type O
Type A can get blood from type A or O
Type B can get blood from type B or O
Type AB can get blood from type A, B, or O
This is without the condition of Rh +/- factored in, which creates more variables and categories from which people can or cannot get blood.
The donor types from which you can receive a blood donation depend on what blood type you have.
Type O can get blood from Type O
Type A can get blood from type A or O
Type B can get blood from type B or O
Type AB can get blood from type A, B, or O
This is without the condition of Rh +/- factored in, which creates more variables and categories from which people can or cannot get blood.
The ABO blood group that you could give blood to is AB only. If your blood clumped with both anti-A and anti-B sera, your ABO blood type would be AB.
Blood type O is a universal donor of all blood types but can only receive from blood type O. Blood type AB is the only blood type that is a universal receiver of any blood type, but can only receive from blood type AB.
The four blood types are A, B, AB, and O. The universal donor is O and the universal recipient is AB
maybe. In terms of the ABO typing, O is the universal donor. However, the donor also needs to have the same Rhesus factor as the patient (Rh+ or Rh-). It is essential to always cross-match the patient's blood with the donor's.
No, AB is a universal recipient, and can only be given to other people with type AB blood. O is a universal donor but can only receive O, A can only receive A and can only be given to A and AB, and B can only receive B and be given to B and AB.
no bcuz all the blood types accept it.that is why is called universal donor.
Blood type O is a universal donor of all blood types but can only receive from blood type O. Blood type AB is the only blood type that is a universal receiver of any blood type, but can only receive from blood type AB.
To be a universal blood donor one must have O- blood type. A person with this blood type has blood cells with no antigens, so it won't react with other blood types, making it safe for anyone to receive the blood.
Blood type is determined by the type of antigen
Type O blood is the Universal Donor so persons with Type A, B, AB and O can receive blood from an O donor depending upon presence of antigens. Type AB is the universal recipient of all blood types depending on the antigens of course.
Blood type O positive is considered the "universal donor" because they can safely give blood to all other blood types without harm however the donor can only receive blood from other type O donors. Positive means that they can receive both positive and negative blood type O.
O- blood used to be considered the universal blood donor but now medicine knows that there are other factors in the blood that can cause rejection from the body.http://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/blood-transfusion/expert-answers/universal-blood-donor-type/faq-20058229
Yes- the AB blood group is known as the 'Universal Recipient', since they can receive blood from any group. Blood group O is known as the 'Universal Donor', since all other blood groups can receive this type, but people with group O can only receive from other group O types.
Not taking Rh Factor into consideration, O is the universal donor. All blood types can receive type O. For information, AB is the universal recipient. They can take any blood type. Remember, this excludes the Rh Factor.
only O negative blood is called the universal donor. This is because people with this blood type have the ability to donate their blood to ANY other blood type. Blood donation is a complex process and only certain types can receive certain types. O neg is the one blood type that can give to anyone (however, they can only RECEIVE from O neg)
Yes, type O blood is considered universal because they can donate to all other blood types. It is also the most common blood type. They only can receive blood from another type O person.
If you have type o negative then you are the universal donor and could donate to any other blood type. If you have o positive then you would be limited in what blood types you could donate to.
The four blood types are A, B, AB, and O. The universal donor is O and the universal recipient is AB