Type O, Rh positive individuals have anti-A, anti-B and anti-AB antibodies in their plasma. Anti-AB antibody is a separate antibody uniquely found in type O individuals.
These are naturally occurring antibodies and develop without prior exposure to non-self red cell antigens.
In addition to the ABO system, there are over 30 additional blood systems/groups of importance in immunohematology. While antibodies to these additional red cell antigens generally develop following exposure to non-self RBC's, there are documented instances of alloantibody formation without identifiable blood exposure.
O positive blood can be transfused to any person with a positive Rh factor, making it a universal donor for Rh-positive individuals. However, it is not universal for all blood types because some individuals may have antibodies to other blood group antigens present in O positive blood.
come on answer it
of course she can
Yes. A person with blood group antibody B can not donate blood to another person with group A because it will agglutinates as they blood group A can only be donated to to a person with blood group A. Even though you donate whole blood, all of it is not given unless you both have the exact blood type. A person with A type (who has B antibodies in their plasma) will only donate their cells. No antibodies will be given. So AB can be given A but without the plasma which has the antibodies.
Yes, blood type has no bearing on weather or not the parents can have a child
NO... bcoz only AO genes are present....when both are coding for antibody A, there's no chance of getting a B group of blood
It contains neither A antigen nor B antigen. their blood can be given to individuals of any other blood group red cells do not carry either A or B antigen and hence they do not react with their corresponding antibodies. Remember that an immune respond can only be trigger when the antigen is present in the blood. In another word the blood originally have no any antibody but upon antigen contact it will trigger the immune respond thus antibody is produced and agglutination of blood occur. for rhesus factor there are memory cell so the antibody is still present. That is why when an O blood group without any antigen and antibody (it have both antibody but it is not create yet as there is nothing to trigger its immune respond) can donate to AB group which has no antibody (which mean it will not be trigger by any blood group) but have both antigen (remember that all donated blood have no antibody as there is no immune respond to trigger it thus the AB blood with both antigen is fine; except rhesus factor if it have memory cell)
Being positive - having a certain antibody on your blood cells - says nothing about anything except whether your parents were positive or not (and even then, exactly what they had cannot be determined solely from that information).
O positive blood can be transfused to any person with a positive Rh factor, making it a universal donor for Rh-positive individuals. However, it is not universal for all blood types because some individuals may have antibodies to other blood group antigens present in O positive blood.
it is when a group of antibodies attack the nucleus of a cell.
due to antigen antibody reaction. it is the principal of the 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
Because the blood cells from the O-group donor have no antigens which would react with the A-antibodies in the recipient.
is A positive blood group and AA blood group the same
no
what is a gf blood group? And what is the question?
It produces antigens instead