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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
Universal receiver is O positive type blood. Individuals with type AB positive blood can also receive blood from any group, but can donate blood only to another AB type. A group A individual can receive blood only from individuals of groups A or O, and can donate blood to individuals with type A or AB. A group B person can receive blood only from individuals with groups B or O and can donate blood to types B or AB. Blood group O persons can receive blood only from a group O individual but can donate blood to individuals who have A, B, O or AB. This is why blood type must be carefully checked by medical personnel prior to authorizing a transfusion. Some people store up their own type in hospitals in case of accidents. Hospitals also keep all types on hand in the form of plasma, Plasma can be easily utilized on the battlefield.
During meiosis (reproduction of sexual cells) the paired chromosomes are separated. Each gamete (sperm or ovum) contributes one chromosome to the zygote.Therefore:· Type AB - made up of one A gene and one B gene· Type O - made up of two OO genes· Mom AB + Dad OO = Baby type AO or BOThe children of this AB X OO mating will have neither blood type of the parent.Instead, they have a combination of the parental genes.
Antigens A & B. If the person inherits just A or B they will be in that blood group, but if they inherit both types of antigens they will be in the AB group, and if they inherit no antibodies they will be in the O group
o-
O Rh- is the universal donor and AB Rh- is the universal recipient of all blood types.
An individual with an "O" blood type can be transfused to any other blood type, since type "O" blood is the universal blood type. This includes an "A" blood type.
O Rh- is the universal donor and AB Rh- is the universal recipient of all blood types.
that will lead to a serious disease and doctors shouldn't allow that to happen
No-one because it is a universal blood donor. :)
A person with Type O can donate to any other blood type, but can only receive blood from another Type O person. A person having blood group O (with absence of Rh-factor) only can donate his blood to any other individual. Rh or Antigen-D is a factor which decides the positivity or negativity of the blood, so the blood group O-negative is considered the universal donor, as it does not effect any of other blood groups.
O- blood can donate to anyone, but can only get blood from other O-'s. If a type A donates to a type O, the antibodies from A collide with the anti-A antibodies from O, and can cause death to the person, or brain damage to a baby that's about to be born.
There are four different blood group types. They are the following: group A, group B, group AB, and group O. The are based on what items make up an individual's blood type - also known as antigens. These antigens can be found on the top of red blood cells and indicate each person's blood type.
Blood group A and also blood group O can. Blood group O can donate blood to any blood group- universal donor.
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.
metals
Yes