An individual with A- (A negative) blood can safely receive the following blood types during a transfusion:
A1 negative person and O negative person
all
A or AB
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
No, an O Positive person cannot donate to an A Negative person because the person who is Negative, or Rh Negative, will react to the Positive (Rh Positive) blood. Negative can only get Negative, Positive can get Positive or Negative.
Yes.
any blood could be donated.
AB negative, A negative, B negative, O negative. Type AB is a universal receiver.
Everyone (any blood type) O negative is known as the universal donor. They can only receive O negative.
Nope - O negative is the only group that can be safely given to the patient if their blood group is unknown.
If you have type o negative then you are the universal donor and could donate to any other blood type. If you have o positive then you would be limited in what blood types you could donate to.
Blood type AB can only donate to another AB type. Blood type O+ can be given to anyone, but a blood type like A or B or AB can only be donated to a person who has the same exact blood type as the person who is donating their blood.
No - a pos can not donate blood to a negative
A person with Type O can donate to any other blood type, but can only receive blood from another Type O person. A person having blood group O (with absence of Rh-factor) only can donate his blood to any other individual. Rh or Antigen-D is a factor which decides the positivity or negativity of the blood, so the blood group O-negative is considered the universal donor, as it does not effect any of other blood groups.
No - a pos can not donate blood to a negative