Special blood types are AB+ (universal recipient) which can receive any blood type but only give to AB+, and O- (universal donor) which can give to any blood type but must receive only O- blood.
* O can be donated to any type, A can be given to both A and AB, B can be given to both B and AB, AB can only be given to AB. * O can only receive O, A can receive A or O, B can receive B or O, AB can receive any. * Rhesus negative can be given to both negative and positive. Positive can only be given to positive. Positive can receive both positive and negative, negative can only receive negative the organ used, and the blood used for transfusion during transplantation, must be from a donor of the same blood type as the patient. There are not blood types which are generallyincompatible with transplant, only those that are incompatible for specific transplants. The patient's blood type is what is important
I assume you are meaning in a transfusion. The ideal blood should be a perfect match. A positive should get A positive. In an emergency an A positive can receive any blood that has no B genotype. O+/-, A+/-,but NO B or AB.
No. The A positive antigen is supposed to set off the A positive antibody, which the B positive blood type does not have.
Blood type B positive means that you have anti-A antibodies, B-antigens, and an Rh factor that is positive. As a B+, you can receive blood from people with blood types O postive, O negative, B positive, and B negative, however a B+ blood type can only donate to a person with B+ and AB+ blood type.
Yes, blood type A positive and B positive can have compatible blood types for their children. The child could be A positive, B positive, AB positive, or O positive. It is always recommended to consult with a healthcare provider for further information and genetic counseling.
no so suck my toes
* O can be donated to any type, A can be given to both A and AB, B can be given to both B and AB, AB can only be given to AB. * O can only receive O, A can receive A or O, B can receive B or O, AB can receive any. * Rhesus negative can be given to both negative and positive. Positive can only be given to positive. Positive can receive both positive and negative, negative can only receive negative the organ used, and the blood used for transfusion during transplantation, must be from a donor of the same blood type as the patient. There are not blood types which are generallyincompatible with transplant, only those that are incompatible for specific transplants. The patient's blood type is what is important
There are a lot of credible and high quality hospitals in India who are trusted to perform critical medical services like kidney transplantation. a. Manipal Hospital - One of the top renal transplant surgery in India b. Apollo Hospitals Delhi - performed more than thousand of kidney transplants c. Fortis Hospitals d. MIOT Hospitals e. Medanta Medicity
A child with blood group AB positive cannot be a biological child of a parent with blood group B positive, as the ABO blood group system does not allow for this combination. The possible blood groups of a child from a B positive parent could be B or O. Therefore, the child is not a match in terms of biological parentage.
In most cases: no.
Blood groups are A, B, and O. Each type of blood is either positive or negative. When a couple is planning on marriage, their blood type is not as important as the positive or negative aspect. A woman with negative blood types may encounter problems having children if her husband has a positive blood type. All blood types are compatible as long as they are both positive or negative.
Type O-negative blood does not have any antigens. It is called the "universal donor" type because it is compatible with any blood type. Type AB-positive blood is called the "universal recipient" type because a person who has it can receive blood of any type. Although "universal donor" and "universal recipient" types may be used to classify blood in an emergency, blood type tests are always done to prevent transfusion reactions.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.
A person with O- (O negative) blood is considered a universal donor. That means that every blood type that exists can receive blood from a person with O- blood. (A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-, O+, O-) A person with O+ (O positive) blood, on the other hand, can donate to any type as long as it is positive. ( A+, B+, O+ or AB+)
I assume you are meaning in a transfusion. The ideal blood should be a perfect match. A positive should get A positive. In an emergency an A positive can receive any blood that has no B genotype. O+/-, A+/-,but NO B or AB.
Yes. They're just genes - mix & match is normal.
No, but she can give to you, so long as the negative and positive match up. (Negative can give to both negative and positive, positive can only give to positive). O can give to everyone; A can only give to A o B; B can only give to B or AB; and AB can give to AB (but not O). if you dont follow those rules your body will reject it and you may die :(