I assume you are meaning in a transfusion. The ideal blood should be a perfect match. A positive should get A positive.
In an emergency an A positive can receive any blood that has no B genotype.
O+/-, A+/-,but NO B or AB.
Yes. If you transfuse type B blood into a type A person there will be agglutination because the type A person naturally makes anti-B antibodies. The converse is also true. If you transfuse type A blood into a type B person there will be agglutination because the type B person naturally makes anti-A antibodies.
Yes, type A blood has A antigens.
The short answer is that the Type B patient has antigens for that specific blood type, so when type A is mixed with the type B, the antibodies in the B blood kill the A blood cells, making it useless.
O positive is a rare blood type. There are very few complications with this blood type that are known. If a person has O blood type then they can receive any type of blood transfusion.
Blood type O can go with any of the other blood types. It is considered the "universal blood-type" because it doesn't have A or B red cell antigens which means that it can go to type A or type B person.
A person with type A blood can donate blood to a person with type A or type AB.
A person with type A blood can donate blood to a person with type A or type AB. A person with type B blood can donate blood to a person with type B or type AB. A person with type AB blood can donate blood to a person with type AB only. A person with type O blood can donate to anyone. A person with type A blood can receive blood from a person with type A or type O. A person with type B blood can receive blood from a person with type B or type O. A person with type AB blood can receive blood from anyone. A person with type O blood can receive blood from a person with type O. hope this helps, #JC# http://www.fi.edu/learn/heart/blood/types.html
They can get a person with blood type A pregnant.
a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.
A - blood type
If someone inherits one A allele for blood type and one B allele for blood type, what will that person's blood type be?
type A
Yes, and this person can also receive blood from blood group type A and 0. If there are complications it is probably due the an other type of blood group, the rhesus blood group.
No, to donate blood safely the donor and the recipient have to have the same blood type.
No. It can only receive the blood coming from a person with type O.
Type b or o
Yes. If you transfuse type B blood into a type A person there will be agglutination because the type A person naturally makes anti-B antibodies. The converse is also true. If you transfuse type A blood into a type B person there will be agglutination because the type B person naturally makes anti-A antibodies.