In St. Lukes Medical Center it's 24,000 per person for a DNA paternity test.
You can buy a kit and do it at home, from www.homedna.com or www.gtldna.net. Or go to dnacenter.com or dnatesting.com and get paternity testing for more information.
When two men who are closely related are suspected of contributing the DNA resulting in a pregnancy, the initial DNA "simple" testing would likely not be able to pin-point which man is the father. But further DNA testing can eliminate one or the other.
I think what you mean to ask is "is DNA testing reliable to determine siblingship in two individuals with the same mother but not the same father?" The answer is, yes, but it depends. DNA is the material that codes for the genes which are essentially the blue print for how we are made. We have 46 chromosome, 23 we get from our mother and 23 from our father. We also get some mitochondrial DNA from our mother only. So testing depends on the individual sex of the children involved, but using mitochondrial DNA, it is quite accurate, since all children born of a certain female should share this DNA.
Some of the same but not completly, they would have some from the parent they share but not the other one.
In St. Lukes Medical Center it's 24,000 per person for a DNA paternity test.
You can not refuse to do a DNA test on your son if there is a court order involved. If you refuse to obey a court order you can go to jail.
Sons usually do carry their father's DNA. DNA is used to prove evidence in paternity as well as crimes. The test may not be as accurate as a test of the man's own DNA would have been but will be an indication. If you know the deceased's blood group and this is the same that could be a reason to do a test of DNA but it is quite expensive.
A father's DNA is present in his son as well as his grandchildren; DNA is transmitted from generation to generation.
A DNA blood test will confirm whether or not you are indeed the father. Some DNA tests can be done with saliva as well, A child can have either the father's blood type, the mother's blood type, or a combination of the two. For instance, a father with type A+, along with a mother with blood type B-, can have A+. A-. B+, or B-.
I think its his genes
You can buy a kit and do it at home, from www.homedna.com or www.gtldna.net. Or go to dnacenter.com or dnatesting.com and get paternity testing for more information.
There will never be a DNA test done because there is no need, he isn't Michael's son, he was just a friend.
father and son bond there nothing wrong with that
You should be able to establish paternity by testing someone in the fathers immediate family, such as a brother, sister, mother, father, etc...the family of the father still carry his DNA even after he is dead.
Trisha - 2012 Will a DNA Test Prove This Woman Is My Son 1-74 was released on: USA: 2013
yes but have a good reason