Type B blood does really good with eating a wide variety of fish. Eat lots of nuts with the fish, and make sure to drink eight glasses of water a day.
Different diets should be followed for each blood type. People with O type blood should focus their diets on protein rich foods. People with type A blood should focus their diets on organic vegetarian diets. People with type B blood should focus their diets on a dairy based diet.
Find a book on blood type diets. People with A blood types have their own set of recommended foods, just as people with B blood types. People with the blood type AB can eat a mix of both the diets.
These diets relating to blood types can be either an: A, AB, B, or O . According to your blood type, is what you should eat. For example, type A blood type would be more of a vegetarian diet, with grains, organic vegetables and gentle exercise.
Most blood type diets are based on the idea that certain blood types require special diets for optimal health. Type O blood type should choose a high protein diet. Type A blood type should choose a vegetarian diet. Type B blood type should choose a balanced omnivore based diet. Type AB blood type should choose a mixed and moderate diet. Furthermore, diets based on blood types have not been proven.
For type A diets, it is best to eat foods that fresh and organic. For type B diets, it is best to eat vegetables along with gamey foods such as lamb and bison. For type O diets, eat a health and balanced diet but exercise is key to weight loss.
Dr. Peter J. D'Adamo has written books on Blood type dieting and his website www.dadamo.com contains a lot of information and resources on blood type dieting. There are links there for community and support where you can talk to others who have your same blood type and a lot of information on the differnent blood type diets including the B type you are looking for.
No, type B blood does not have A antigens. Type B blood has B antigens.
There is a book by Peter D'Adamo that outlines special diets by blood type. There are differences in diet, for example, people with type O blood should not eat much dairy, but people with type B blood should eat dairy.
At the site for the Official Blood Diet, it is suggested that a person with a rarer AB-blood type would benefit from following aspects from both the A- and B-blood type diets to attain digestive balance.
blood type A has type A antigens. blood type B has type B antigens.
The diet for specific blood types that is generally accepted focuses the difference between the diets on the type of blood (i.e. O, A, or B) rather than the positive or negative charge associated with the blood type. There is no specification for a person with negative type blood.
There are actually 8 blood types, as you're using the term. You can either be type A, B, AB, or O, and you can either be Rh positive or Rh negative. Therefore, the 8 bloodtypes are A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-, O+, and O-. The best blood type for a transfusion is whatever bloodtype the recipient is. I.e. if someone is blood type A negative, then A negative is the preferred blood type to be given. However, there are also other blood types that are acceptable, depending on the recipient's blood type. And O- is acceptable for ALL blood types. That is why it is in such high demand in blood donations... because it can be accepted by anyone. Most individuals (~40% are blood type O, so type O is likely the most common type used in blood transfusions).