No, the baby will always take the blood type of the father. So, the child will be A positive.
Also, Since the father is either Heterozygous(IA i) or Homozygous(IaIa), he will always give the Type A blood. For type O blood you need ii. Since the father will never contribute a small i, it is impossible to have a child with Type O blood.
yes, and their baby's blood group will also be O... O blood group is normal and most prevalent amongst the four blood grops in a population. It only significant when receiving blood transfusions and is considered a universal donor (so a person with O blood group can only receive blood from a donor having O blood group). The positive sign indicates the Rhesus factor and is only a problem when the father is positive and the mother is negative. The blood group should not have any dire affects on the development of the baby.
NO you do not have any problem when of you are Rh positive. The problem raises only when the female partner has the rh -ve blood group.
Yes, they can. The only time blood type is an issue is when the mother has a negative blood type and the father has a positive.
Yes.
Blood types don't matter in this case.
yes due to some genetic combinations
no, if both parents are A still there is a chance of O baby ,but for the child to have A blood type atleast one of the parents must have A or AB blood group Parents having the following blod groups may have an A baby AA and AA baby will have A blood group only AA and AO baby with A group only AO and AO baby may have A or O blood group AB and OO baby with A or B blood group AA and OO baby with A blood group only AAand AB baby with A or AB blood group AO and BO baby of A AB B or O blood group AO and AB baby of A AB or B blood group AB and AB baby having A B or AB blood group (each individual has one,two or no antigens .when no antigen it results in O blood group ,when one or two A antigens ,the person has A blood group so its not necessary that both parents of A blood group child have A blood type
The two AB parents could have any of an A, B or AB, but not O.The two A parents could have either A or O children, but not B or AB.The two B parents could have either B or O children, but not A or AB.The two O parents could only have O children; they cannot have have A, B or AB.If both parents have rhesus-negative blood, so will their children. If both have positive, the child might be either.
type A
This is a common misconception, that parents with type A or B or AB blood cannot have an O child. There are four blood types : A, B, AB, and O. When a baby is created, the mother donates one gene, and the father donates another. Therefore the baby has TWO genes coding for its blood type. The A gene and B gene are co-dominant. This means that if Mom gives baby an A gene, and Dad gives baby a B gene, both will be expressed through the blood group. THUS, baby is AB. However, the O gene is recessive. This means that if mom gives baby an A gene, and Dad gives baby an O gene, only the A gene is expressed. THUS baby's blood type is A. Therefore, people who type as an "A" can also carry the O gene - it is simply not expressed. Same theory applies to "B" type people. "AB" people carry only A and B, therefore, AB people should be theoretically incapable of creating an O child (save and except for a rare genetic transloation which can occurs called cis-AB). THEREFORE: if your mom is A (she can really be AA or AO) and your dad is B (again he can be BB or BO), and both carry the O Gene (i.e. AO & BO) The O genes may be passed on to you! Only when TWO O genes are inherited (OO) does a person express an O blood type. This being said, O blood types do not carry ABO antigens on their surface, unlike A cells, B cells, and AB cells. Therefore, O cells are essentially a "blank slate". This is ideal for people in need of blood immediately: a person of ANY blood type (A, B, AB, or O) can receive O blood. Visit a donation center today and help save lives.
Blood type of a child is determined equally by both parents. Each person has two alleles for their ABO blood type. One allele comes from mom, the other comes from dad. A and B alleles are dominant over the O allele. So blood type O people are two O alleles, one from each parent. Blood type A people can be AA or AO. People with AO are still considered blood type A because A is dominant over O. Blood type B people can be BB or BO. People with BO are considered blood type B because B is dominant over O. Blood type AB people got an A from one parent and a B from another parent. But since A and B are equally dominant, you're AB.
It is impossible for two type O people to have a type AB offspring. One person must be A or AB and the other must be B or AB to have an AB offspring.
For parents with o+o, they will have kids with O type blood. For parents with A+A, they will have kids with A or O type blood. For parents with B+B, they will have kids with B or O type blood. Foe parents with AB+AB, they will have kids with AB, A or B type blood.
Yes this is blood grouping. The type of blood one has is directly related to their parents. If two people with type A blood have a child, That childs blood will be type A.
yes
it doesn't matter what type of blood you have to have children.
yes
Yes
No
No, this can't happen, if two parents are O blood type, all kinds will be O.
No. A positive O blood type means that each parent has two copies of the O blood type allele and can only give an O to their baby. The baby must have the blood type O. However, it can be O positive or O negative.
Yes, two Type O parents can create a healthy Type O baby. If the mother is Type O negative, and the first baby is positive, then there may be a danger to future positive babies because, during the first pregnancy, the mom's body may produce antigens to the positive blood type. This scenario may be why blood tests are taken when couples marry. A doctor should be consulted.
Everyone only has two alleles for blood type. The parents each pass one down to the child.