No, this is a routine procedure. A UTI is more likely to cause harm than a catheterization.
Yes of course all blood types produce the same species of genes it just will help determine what blood type your child will have.
Unfortunately you can not determine what your child's blood type will be, however you can narrow it down. Offspring inherit the blood type of either the mother of the father. So your child will either have blood type A or blood type O.
No
You can check your future offsprings blood type using an inheritance chart. If both you and your partner have A blood, then there is a great chance that the child will have A blood as well.
Blood type is not a sex-linked trait. Both parents contribute equally to determine a child's blood type.
Yes, so does the father's. The blood type is determined by the genes inherited from the parents. Each parent provides one factor and the two factors determine the blood type. The child can easily have a different blood type than their parents.
To determine whether or not the alleged father could be the true father, the blood types of the child, mother, and alleged father are compared.
Yes but the sign of type two diabetes shows up later in that child's life. Make sure that your child blood sugar is stable. Getting a blood test done yearly can help determine this outcome.
Because if you do not carry the Rh factor you can cause damage to your babies blood and blood flow. People who lack it might not have the best of chance keeping the child alive.
No, the child has to have one of the parents blood type.
In order to determine your child's blood type, you would need to consult with your family physcian. He or she can have a blood type test ordered. This may or may not be available in the office. Using a laymens understanding of medicine, I would assume, the child would have o, but know this may not be the case.
The child is often placed by an open window so he/she may be checked in natural light. Blood samples may be taken to determine the bilirubin level in the blood.