Well blood type O+ can be given to anyone, but they can only receive their blood type. And O+ blood can be combined with certain materials that are found in A type or B type to make it another blood type. And people with a blood type of A or B or AB can only give their blood to people who have the same exact blood type as them.
There are eight different bloodtypes: O+, O-, A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-. AB can receive blood from anyone, but can only donate to another AB person. A can receive blood from groups A or O, but can only donate to an A or AB person. B can receive from B or O, but can only donate to a B or AB person. O is the universal donor and can donate to anyone, but can only receive from another O individual.
all blood types made compatible with each other
Type O+ blood is compatible with AB, A+, B+, and O+ blood types. That is, if your blood type is O positive, you can receive AB, A positive, B positive, and O positive blood types.
When having RH blood type, it can complicate pregnancy, but it is rare. It is normally when the fetus's blood travels through your canal. RH blood types are compatible with other RH blood types.
red blood cells,white blood cells,plasma and platelets maybe....
More than just two blood types are not compatible with each other. The four basic types of blood are: A, B, AB, O(not counting Rh). Type A blood can only receive blood from type A and type O. However, type A blood can donate their blood to type A and type AB. Type B blood can only receive blood from type B and type O. However, type B blood can donate their blood to type B and type AB. Type AB blood can receive blood from every type, A, B, AB, and O. However, type AB blood can only donate to other AB. Type O blood can only receive blood from type O. However, type O can donate their blood to A, B, AB, and O. So, AB is the "universal" reciepient and O is the "universal" donor.
O- is compatible with donating to all blood types. AB+ is compatible with receiving from all blood types. All other blood types are on their own with compatibility.
When the body encounters types of blood it is not familiar with, it makes antibodies to attack it. That's why O- is the universal donor. O means it has neither A or B components, and the negative means it does not have specific receptor proteins on it. That's also why someone AB+ can have any type of blood, because the body is used to A components, B components, and receptor proteins.
The blood type that is compatible with A negative blood are -A and AB-. O+ is compatible, but should only be used in life-threatening emergency. The same should be take in effect for A+
type o is compatible with all blood types
all blood types made compatible with each other
O- is compatible with any blood type (giving to that type) AB+ can receive any blood. Other blood types are only compatible with themselves and not each other.
Type O+ blood is compatible with AB, A+, B+, and O+ blood types. That is, if your blood type is O positive, you can receive AB, A positive, B positive, and O positive blood types.
Yes, two blood types that are the same are compatible for donation. Either can give or receive blood from the other.
You are compatible with your own blood type and type O, unless you are type AB, then you are compatible with A, B, AB and O. It's important to have compatible blood types especially during pregnancy.
Type O is compatible with any other types (in that it can be donated to anyone). Type A is compatible ONLY with Type A and Type AB. Type B is compatible with itself and Type AB. Type AB is compatible with any of the others (it can receive from any of the other types).
I believe type O blood is the one blood type that can be matched to any of the other blood types. There is one type of blood, though, that is not compatible with type O blood. However, that is very rare.
Blood types have absolutely no impact on the ability to conceive.