many youth will try to commit sexual intercoarse
due to curriosity on that matter.
because of that, many other youth as of now define sex as their past time.
dgrtki8iu
yes
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.
AB negative is a RH negative blood type.
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
Rh factor does not have any effect on a person's health, so it it neither a good or bad thing. The only difference is that people with Rh negative blood can only receive blood donations from other Rh negative donors.
It depends on the genotype of the Rh+ parent. If that person is heterozygous, then yes there is a 50% chance of an Rh- baby.Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive heterozygous)Rh +Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh - Rh -http://www.bloodbook.com/inherited.htmlIf the positive parent is homozygous, the baby will be positive:Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive homozygous)Rh +Rh +Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh + Rh -
not making a child born, making the mother harder task to have.. :)
It can lessen the burden of our Government and our economy will be able to increase
Yes, for a child to be Rh negative, both parents must carry at least one Rh negative allele. If both parents are Rh positive, they can still have an Rh negative child if both are carriers of the Rh negative allele.
Yes. The mother would have to have a heterozygous Rh genotype, so that she could pass on an Rh negative allele to her offspring.
Each person carries two bits of rh imformation, called alleles, and each can be positive or negative. A person is rh+ if they have at least one positive allele. Only if both their alleles are negative are they considered as rh-. When two parents have a baby, they each pass one allele on. So if both parent has one positive and one negative allele, and both passed on their negative allele to their baby, then the baby would be rh negative. The chances of two rh positive parents having a rh negative baby are about 18%.