There are MANY bloodless surgeries. These include Cell Salvage, Volume Expander, and Delusion of the Blood through Water. I'd recommend speaking with a/your doctor about bloodless surgeries and the like.
A person with O- blood can only get blood from another O- person.
A person who is O- can only accept blood from another O- person, but they are the universal donor, and can give their blood to anyone.
that will lead to a serious disease and doctors shouldn't allow that to happen
Yes, but only if the patient has B, or AB blood. Anyone can receive o blood.
Yes, it is possible to give O Positive blood to O Negative patients, but it is not likely to happen. Blood Bankers are trained to "match" blood to the person receiving the blood and these two types, while compatible, are not a good "match". The presence of the Rh factor in O Positive blood is likely to cause an immune response when given to a patient that does not have the Rh factor as in Rh Negative blood. The opposite is acceptable. It is perfectly OK to give Rh Negative blood to and Rh Positive person since they will not be getting something they do not already posses.
A person with O- blood can only get blood from another O- person.
that the person is ugly ,antonio gordon
If the patient blood levels fall (maybe due to hemorrhage), the oxygen that the RBCs are carrying is lost with the blood. The person will feel 'out of breath'.
A person who is O- can only accept blood from another O- person, but they are the universal donor, and can give their blood to anyone.
the patient donates blood once a week for one to three weeks before surgery. The blood is separated and the blood components needed are reinfused during the operation.
it may indicate that the patient or person has ulcer
Preoperative donation: the patient donates blood once a week for one to three weeks before surgery. The blood is separated and the blood components needed are reinfused during surgery.
The heart must come from a person with the same blood type as the patient, unless it is blood type O negative. A blood type O negative heart is a universal donor and is suitable for any patient regardless of blood type.
A person who has type O blood is called a universal donor which means you can donate blood to anybody no matter what their blood type is. The only thing is a person with o Type blood can only receive O type blood and nothing else. I worked in a ER and if the patient needed a blood transfusion and we didn't know what blood type he was we always gave type O blood.
Depends on what blood type the person receiving the transplant is. They have to be the same.
If a transfusion is given to a patient from a person with a different blood type, the immune system will attack those blood cells. This can cause a severe reaction in the patient, including shock to the immune system or death.
For the blood sample, the patient should be fasting (nothing to eat or drink) for at least eight hours before the test