the donated type A blood will not be transfused to the person with type B.
if they do, there may be some complications and even blood clotting to the person receiving blood. what most hospitals or blood banks do in cases like that, they swap the blood of type A to a type B blood stored in the blood bank so that it will be the one transfused to the recipient.
Type AB blood does not carry any antibodies in the plasma that would react against any of the other ABO alleles. If given Type A blood after a sucessful cross-matching, the recipient of the blood will be better for having the transfusion.
Blood group A and also blood group O can. Blood group O can donate blood to any blood group- universal donor.
Yes. If you transfuse type B blood into a type A person there will be agglutination because the type A person naturally makes anti-B antibodies. The converse is also true. If you transfuse type A blood into a type B person there will be agglutination because the type B person naturally makes anti-A antibodies.
Blood types A and B are incompatible because a type A person has naturally occurring Anti-B in his blood and a type B person has naturally occurring Anti-A. Thus a type A person can not receive blood from a type B person because the naturally occurring anti-A would destroy the type A person's red cells. The converse is true for a type B person who can not receive type A blood since the Anti-B found in the type A blood would destroy the type B person's red cells.
blood type B
Type b or o
blood type B
B and o
A person with type A blood can donate blood to a person with type A or type AB. A person with type B blood can donate blood to a person with type B or type AB. A person with type AB blood can donate blood to a person with type AB only. A person with type O blood can donate to anyone. A person with type A blood can receive blood from a person with type A or type O. A person with type B blood can receive blood from a person with type B or type O. A person with type AB blood can receive blood from anyone. A person with type O blood can receive blood from a person with type O. hope this helps, #JC# http://www.fi.edu/learn/heart/blood/types.html
because there is a trace of B blood in AB blood they can receive B blood>
If a mother who is blood type A and she donates her A allele to the baby, then it could definitely be type A.
Yes - blood type O or B are the only possibilities. Each parent donates one allele to the child. The parent with blood type O must donate an O. The parent with blood type be will donate either a B or an O - they can only donate an O if they are heterozygous, BO.
a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.