If the recipient has type B blood, they can receive either type B or type O blood. If the donor blood is type B, then the recipient can be either type B or type AB
A blood donor is a person who donates blood for use in transfusion.
Acute immune hemolytic reaction
A blood donor is a person who donates blood for use in transfusion.
Blood Transfusion
The donor
blood group O because it have no antigen.
Blood transfusion does NOT depend on which religion a person belongs. All that is taken into account is the compatibility of the blood group pf the donor and the recipient.
crossmatching
The universal blood donor type is O negative and it is considered a universal donor due to it's not having any A or B antigens. It is better because that blood will be more useful to health care staff as they can give it to anyone without having to worry about the threat of transfusion reaction.
O negative is the universal donor because when O+ve blood group is transfused to -ve blood group recipient, antibodies are produced which causes hemolysis of Rh +ve labelled blood cells. When O-ve blood is transfused to Rh +ve recipient, no antibodies are produced as donor blood has no Rh factor present on blood cells, so no transfusion reaction occurs. Thus, O -ve is universal donor.
This refers to type O blood. Anyone can receive this as a transfusion. No real name for it, though, just universal donor.
A delayed transfusion reaction is the most likely result. Anti-D antibodies will bind to the Rh positive red cells, with subsequent removal from circulation by the spleen.