I assume you meant to ask "O- or O+", but it wouldn't allow the punctuation. O- (O-negative) is the universal donor.
no donors can only receive o-
People who have type O blood are universal donors, but not universal recipients. They can donate to anyone, but can only receive blood from another type O person. This is why type O blood is always in great demand by blood banks.
Type O is considered the universal blood type.
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.
Blood Type Antigens on Red Blood Cell Can Donate Blood To Antibodies in Serum Can Receive Blood From A A A, AB Anti-B A, O B B B, AB Anti-A B, O AB A and B AB None AB, O O None A, B, AB, O Anti-A and anti-B O
ABO stands for 4 most common blood antigens called A, B, AB and O. The person with Type A has antigen A, type B has antigen B and type AB has both A and B antigens. Type O has no A or B antigen. Antibodies against these two antigens are found thus type A has anti B, type B has anti A, type O has anti A & anti B. Type AB has no antibodies. They can receive blood from any type. Rh neg can go to Rh +/- Rh pos can only go to Rh+ Type O neg blood is called the universal donor can be given to A, B, AB, O with Rh+ or Rh- Type O pos blood can only go to O, A, B & AB pos Type O blood can receive donation only from type O. The 'universal donor' applies only to packed RBC's and not to whole blood products due to the anti bodies A and B found in serum. Type A, B, or AB given type O whole blood would produce a hemolytic transfusion reaction due to the antibodies found in the serum. Type A blood can receive blood from donors of type A and type O blood. Type B blood can receive blood from donors of type B and type O blood. Type AB blood can receive blood from donors of type A, type B, type AB, or type O blood.
no donors can only receive o-
Yes because universal donors have o blood.
No antigens.That is why they are the universal donors and anyone can receive their blood.
No, any type B blood types including B positive are not universal donors or universal recipients. Type O is the universal donor as it has neither A nor B antigen on the red cells. Type O blood donors can donate blood to anyone. Type AB is the universal recipient type and can receive blood from all blood types.
People with blood type O are universal donors, not universal recipients.
People who have type O blood are universal donors, but not universal recipients. They can donate to anyone, but can only receive blood from another type O person. This is why type O blood is always in great demand by blood banks.
There is no blood group that is considered as universal recipient. Blood type O individuals are considered to be universal donors.
Type O is considered the universal blood type.
When you have negative blood you're automatically an universal donor. These groups have packed red blood cells. AB are receivers which mean they can receive any blood donated to them.
Universal Donors
AB blood types can receive blood from any donors, also known as "Universal Recipients". Your blood, however, can only be received by other AB types. To contrast, type O blood types can give blood to anyone, but can only receive type O blood.
Type O is the universal donor and that is able to be given to anyone with or without that blood type. It can also receive plasma from all the other blood types, but yet only O donors can receive blood from each other.