as long as they dont get mixed it happens all the time... but there are also several cases where there are troubles.. talk o the doctor if i recall correctly there is something they can give to help
I do not see what this statement is asking. There have been instances where a pregnant woman has developed antibodies against the fetus with a different blood type than her own.
To carry oxygen, nutrients and antibodies to body organs and to take the rubbish away.
I'm not certain what this question is really asking. If read literally, I would assume yes, a mother and a father can parent an AB positive child provided they are capable adults. If the question is asking can a man have a child that has a different blood type than his, the answer is yes. A baby will have either mom or dad's blood type. Now if dad is O pos and mom is AB pos and the baby's blood type is neither one of those, I would suggest DNA testing for that baby.
Blood supplies oxygen and nutrients to all parts of the body.
The umbilical cord contains blood vessels which carry substances to and from the placenta and thence from the mother.
Antibodies
No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
The Veins carry de-oxygenated blood Haemoglobin, a chemical in red blood cells carries both carbon dioxide and oxygen.
no. The possible blood types of an offspring are A, B, and AB. in order to have a recesive gene have a possibility of appeaing in the child oth the mother and father must carry the gene.
It really did start with a rhesus monkey. There are four: O, A, B and AB. there is a factor, too. If you have it you are postive. If you don't you are negative. O is the most common and about 60% of people have it. About 30% have A. B is around 5% and the rarest, AB is about 2% O can donate to any other blood type depending upon the factor but can only give to itself. A can take O and B can, too. A can only give to A and B can only give to B. A person with the positive factor cannot give to someone with a negative factor and also the other way around. The rarest blood is AB negative and is found among the American Indians. there are also sub factors which usually occur as a result of having received blood. No blood factor is changed by donation of blood.
The Rh factor is associated with issues in pregnancies. Rh- (Rh- negative) people do not automatically carry anti- Rh antibodies but the immune system will manufacture them if exposed to Rh+ blood. If the Rh- negative mother has not been exposed to Rh+ blood the first pregnancy will progress without complications. However upon delivering her first child the severing of the placenta from the uterus will expose the Rh- negative mother to the Rh+ blood stimulating the production of Rh+ antibodies. If the Rh- woman becomes pregnant with another Rh+ child her antibodies will traverse the placenta and obliterate the infants erythrocytes (RBCs). The baby will develop a condition known as erythroblastosis fetalis which may result in death if untreated prior to birth.
No. Veins carry blood to your heart and arteries carry blood away.Arteries carry blood away