B Positive type blood can be safely given to persons with blood types:
Blood type B negative is compatible with receiving red blood cells from individuals with blood types B negative and O negative.
Individuals with B negative blood type can receive blood donations from individuals with B negative blood type and individuals with O negative blood type.
Officially, there are 8 different types of blood but it is close since there are positive and negative versions of blood types A,B,AB, and O. But the least common type would be blood type AB-.
Blood type B negative has antibodies against blood type A antigens. This means that individuals with blood type B negative should not receive blood transfusions with type A or AB blood since their immune system will recognize these blood types as foreign and mount an immune response against them.
O positive O negative A positive A negative B positive B negative AB positive AB negative The rarest of all these blood types listed is AB negative making up 0.7% of the worlds population.
Blood type B negative is compatible with receiving red blood cells from individuals with blood types B negative and O negative.
Individuals with B negative blood type can receive blood donations from individuals with B negative blood type and individuals with O negative blood type.
i think that 15% of people in the whole world have this blood group
B negative or O negative.
O postive and A positive are the most common blood types. The rarest type is AB negative, followed by B negative. AB positive is also one of the less common blood types.
(b negative) person can only receive blood from b negative person or ( o negative )person
B negative and O negative red blood cells.
Officially, there are 8 different types of blood but it is close since there are positive and negative versions of blood types A,B,AB, and O. But the least common type would be blood type AB-.
no
realistically, the only common blood type that B types can get, is B+ or B-, depending on which one they themselves have. However, O-, the universal receiver, can be given to all blood types. Unfortunately, there are very few O- blood types. So blood donations will help. AB+, for extra information, is a blood type that is known to be a universal receiver
No
If a child does not have the same blood type as either the father or the mother there is nothing to worry about. It is fairly common for a child to have a blood type that combines the blood types of the parents, such as an AB negative child whose parents had A negative and B negative blood.