To be absolutely certain your full blood type would need to be known as you are B positive your genotype can be either BB or BO as B is dominant to O. If you are group BO your child can be either
AB
BO
AO
However if you are BB then you child can be
AB
BB
As to if they will be positive or negative im not sure but im fairly certain that since you and your wife are both rhesus positive then your child will be too.
The baby will either be A positive or B positive but the baby's genotype will be AO+ or BO+
Yes, people with any blood group can have a child.Problems can occur if the mother is Rh negative, and the baby is Rh positive - because the antibodies of the mother may act as if allergic to the baby.There should be no problems with a Rh positive mother.
If you're talking RH Factor (i.e., you are O-Positive, and your wife is O-Positive) then the baby will be O-Positive. If both the RH Factors are positive, then the baby will be positive.
The most severe form of erythroblastosis fetalis is that resulting from Rh incompatibility. But you can have erythroblastosis fetalis with ABO incompatibility as well. And this can occur with any child, even the first, and even with an Rh-negative child. However, if you're referring to Rh-incompatibility erythroblastosis fetalis, the answer to your question is, "Not usually" (assuming she hasn't had a previous Rh-positive child). In Rh-incompatibility, erythroblastosis fetalis occurs with the woman's second Rh-positive child. The first Rh-positive child's blood gets into the mother's bloodstream (e.g. at childbirth). The mother's blood makes antibodies to Rh. Since the first child is already born, this does not affect the first child. Then, when she has a second Rh-positive child, her antibodies cross the placenta and attack that child's blood cells. On the other hand, if the mother is exposed to the Rh factor of the first child's blood earlier in the pregnancy somehow, then I suppose she could develop enough antibodies to cause a problem for that first child.
A-and O-
"A","B","AB" "O" either positive or negative
Yes.In the case that his wife has an A blood group,either A+ or A-. Yes.In the case that his wife has an A blood group,either A+ or A-. Yes. In the case that the mother has an blood group of A, (either A+ or A-).
AB positive / A positive / B positive
Yes, if your genotype is BO, you can pass on the O allele and the child will be type O. If your genotype is BB, then no, the child will be type B (BO). Positive or negative depends on your specific Rh factor, and that of your husbands.
The baby will either be A positive or B positive but the baby's genotype will be AO+ or BO+
Is mom rh positive or negative?
Yes. My wife and I are both O positive, and we have a healthy twelve year old daughter that is also O positive.
It is actually better if you have the same blood group.
Nothing happens, also nothing happens to their babies. Because the mother is Rhesus positive she won't make antibody's against the baby's blood. The only danger is when a Rh negative mother gives birth to a Rh positive child. RV
The chances are 50/50 between A+ and B+. If the baby is type O, it's not yours, dude.
Yes, people with any blood group can have a child.Problems can occur if the mother is Rh negative, and the baby is Rh positive - because the antibodies of the mother may act as if allergic to the baby.There should be no problems with a Rh positive mother.
Simple answer - NO. The child will always have the same blood group as one of its parents.