anti d inj. is given soon after first child birth.
The answer is no. If both parents have a positive Rh factor, the child will have a positive Rh factor. For example, my mother's blood type was O positive and my father's blood type was A negative. My blood type is 0 negative. I got my mother's blood type but my father's Rh factor. The negative Rh factor has to be passed from parent to child. If both parents had negative Rh factors the child in question would also have a negative Rh factor. The different types of blood, a,b,o,ab, and abo have no influence on the child having the negative Rh factor. Expecting mother's having the negative Rh factor need injections of Rhogam if the father of the child has a positive blood type. This is needed because the mother's body will attack the fetus if the baby has a positive blood type. The body doesn' recognize it and treats it as an invader. The baby can be born severly anemic or can even die. This will also effect pregnancies after that so I urge you to speak with your doctor regarding this issue. I hope I answered your question. Best wishes.............Theresa
get a bandana get beat up get money wear red. from saahir larosa = Answer = I'm going to say this in a sense that you have some clue about what I'm about to say. The child CAN indeed have a blood type of A negative, because the mother's Rh is Rr which is still considered Rh+ because the "R" is dominant over "r". If the father has the same Rh, the child has 25% of being Rh-(without doing dihybrid cross).
in science the positive blood type has two Geno-types :Rh+ Rh- or Rh+Rh+and the negative blood type has only one Geno-type :Rh- Rh-there are 3 possibilities :Rh + Rh- X Rh - Rh- 50% of kids will be Rh+ 50% will be Rh-Rh+ Rh+ X Rh - Rh- 100% of kids will be Rh+Rh+ Rh- x Rh+ Rh- either possibility exists in theory 25% could be Rh -
It depends. If the mother is heterozygous rh+ rh- for the rh blood type, then the baby could inherit an rh- allele from both parents, and then it would be rh negative.
It happens when the father is of a positive blood group (having Rhesus (Rh) factor) and mother of a negative blood group (devoid of Rh factor), the fetes' blood group will be of the positive type, i.e., having Rh factor as having Rh factor is a dominant trait and can mask the negative blood group. So, this creates problems for the kid as well as mother during pregnancy. Usually, the first pregnancy will not have much complications. But, the second pregnancy onwards, the antibodies present in the mother from the first pregnancy will be present and is harmful for the fetes. It happens when the father is of a positive blood group (having Rhesus (Rh) factor) and mother of a negative blood group (devoid of Rh factor), the fetes' blood group will be of the positive type, i.e., having Rh factor as having Rh factor is a dominant trait and can mask the negative blood group. So, this creates problems for the kid as well as mother during pregnancy. Usually, the first pregnancy will not have much complications. But, the second pregnancy onwards, the antibodies present in the mother from the first pregnancy will be present and is harmful for the fetes.
yes
Yes. The mother would have to have a heterozygous Rh genotype, so that she could pass on an Rh negative allele to her offspring.
Yes, this is possible. only if the mother's alleles are Heterozygous (Rh+Rh-).
Yes, this is possible. only if the mother's alleles are Heterozygous (Rh+Rh-).
If a person has the Rh factor, then they are positive. If they don't have the Rh factor, they are negative. The Rh factor is dominant, so a mother with it would have an Rh positive baby even if the father is negative for the Rh factor.
What happens if a mother is Rh positive and a father is Rh negative is that they mother is given a RhoGAM shot when she gives birth. She will have to do this each time she gives birth, even if the births are not live.
The rhogam shot is routinely given to mothers who are rh negative who may have rh positive babies. If you are rh positive there is no need to get the shot. However, if you are rh positive and get the shot it will not effect you or the baby.
Yes. The father's phenotype is AO+*; the mother's is OO--.
Can a child with RH neg blood come from parents that are A positive and A negative
The child will be A or B or AB, Rh+ or Rh- . So yes, the child can be A-.
The child can have either Rh positive or Rh negative blood. More information is needed on the mother's genotype to know for sure. With the information currently given, the child has a 25% chance of being Rh negative.
Theoretically : If mother AB+ ( with hetero alleles Rh+Rh-) children are : A+,A-,B+,B- If mother AB+ ( with homo alleles Rh+Rh+) children are : 100% A+,B+