YOu are universal donater, you can donate blood to a, b and ab positive blood groups.
Yes, people with AB positive blood can receive O positive blood. In fact, AB+ can receive *any* blood, A, B, O, or AB, positive or negative. It is the other blood types that have restrictions.
The child could be A+, AB+, B+, A-, AB-, or B-. That is, any blood type except O positive or O negative.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a MOTHER.Available information:Father type O pos -- can only be OO with Rh (++) or (+-)Genes: O, (+), (-)Baby type O neg -- can only be OO with Rh (--)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Mother must contribute an O and Rh (-)Blood type AO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type BO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type OO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)With the father contributing an O and (-) gene, the mother mus contribute the other O and (-); therefore the mother can be Type A pos/neg, Type B pos/neg or Type O pos/neg, with Type O neg being the best case of getting the O neg baby.
The negative in "O Negative" means that it's Rh negative, meaning that anyone, either positive or negative can receive that Rh type. O negative blood can be given to anyone. It's the Universal Donor.
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Any. Being Kell positive, they will not form an antibody to an antigen their body possesses. The person can receive Kell pos or neg blood.
Yes, people with AB positive blood can receive O positive blood. In fact, AB+ can receive *any* blood, A, B, O, or AB, positive or negative. It is the other blood types that have restrictions.
RH- and RH+ are not blood types, they are factors.
O neg is the second rarest blood group (AB neg is the rarest). It is more valuable than rare, as it is a universal donor.
Yes. Each person has two genes to make up their blood group and rhesus group, one from each parent. For blood groups, groups A and B are dominant over O, and for rhesus groups positive is dominant over negative. If you have one of each, your type will be whichever the dominant one is. Firstly looking at the blood group - an O group child can be born to group B parents if both the mother's and father's blood group genotype is BO. The child has a 25% chance of being BB (group B), 50% chance of being BO (group B) and 25% chance of being OO (group O). Looking at the rhesus group - mother's genotype must be Neg/Neg, father could be pos/pos, in which case the child will always be rhesus positive, or pos/neg where the child has a 50% chance of being rhesus positive, and 50% chance of being rhesus negative.
Mixing blood types will not any impact on the health of a child, only the resultant inherited blood type. This particular mix will produce a child with an A pos or A neg or O pos or O neg blood group.
The child could be A+, AB+, B+, A-, AB-, or B-. That is, any blood type except O positive or O negative.
I think its either O neg, AB neg or Rhesus D Positive.
Only 2% of the people have B neg. blood. They can give blood to B neg people only. Can receive O neg. if needed. B Neg. is best. It's the newest blood group known and was develope over time for higher alatues.
Well of course. Why not? You will have B pos or B neg children. 2nd Answer: Yes. The problem that can result in having a blue baby occurs when the mom is 'negative' and the dad is 'positive'. This is not a blood type issue, but rather a Rh factor issue.
Yes, the possibilities are A pos or neg and O pos or neg, see the related link.
i would guess Rh neg.