Yes. If the father is AO instead of AA (both of which are 'A' bloodtypes) and the mother is BO instead of BB (again, both simply called B), they can produce a child with type O blood. This website can illuminate the matter further for you: http://www.Biology.Arizona.edu/Human_Bio/problem_sets/blood_types/Intro.html
Yes an AA mother can marry an AA father, when they give birth, it wil result to an AA children
There is no possible way that this man is the father of this baby because he would have passed down a bloodtype gene to give this child at least part O blood.
If the father's Rh factor is negative, it is helpful to know before birth if the baby is negative so an antibody reaction can be anticipated.
You should be able to. O type blood is usually described as the universal donators of blood because all body systems should accept in the blood system.
The genotype of the father is certainly OO (because blood type O is recessive). The genotype of the mother however can be AO or AA (both give blood type A). The baby will have a combination of the genes from the mother and the father (one of each) and so: - If the genotype of the mother is AA and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby will certainly have AO as genotype and has therefore blood type A. -If the genotype of the mother is AO and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby can have AO or OO as genotype. AO results in blood type A and OO in blood type O (50% chance).
Yes an AA mother can marry an AA father, when they give birth, it wil result to an AA children
There is no possible way that this man is the father of this baby because he would have passed down a bloodtype gene to give this child at least part O blood.
yes can
If you mean same blood type, it doesn't matter. There can be a problem with the RH factor if a woman is negative and the husband is positive. However, this can be solved easily at the hospital when you give birth and happens is an RH negative woman gives birth to an RH positive baby. You will be given a shot to protect the next baby from antibodies.
Possibly. If the babies father is coloured the is a chance other than that I don't know.
A woman who has lost a baby after giving birth was still a mother.
This can be a cause if the baby had a low blood count from birth or very shortly after, especially if this is not the first pregnancy. Hemolytic disease of the newborn can be caused by the mother's antibodies attacking the baby's red blood cells if the baby if Rh positive and the mother is Rh negative. The antibodies get into the baby before birth, however, so if the baby developed a low blood count at 3 months it would not be because of the negative/positive blood type.
If the father is homozygous (ii, BB): the baby will be type B. If the father is heterozygous (ii, Bi): the baby will be type B or O.
From my research I haven't found a way to know for certain your baby's blood type before birth. You can however narrow it down some if you know the father's and your blood types you could make a punnet square.
A baby is a small adult that woman give birth to.
If the father's Rh factor is negative, it is helpful to know before birth if the baby is negative so an antibody reaction can be anticipated.
The Baby Would Be Type A Blood