An individual who is blood type AB negative can receive any blood type that is negative. Somebody who is O negative can donate blood to anyone.
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
AB negative is the rarest blood type. AB positive is the second rarest blood type. The negative blood types are more rare than the positive. The common blood type is o.
AB+ is the third rarest blood type. 1 person in 29 has AB+ which is 3.4% percent of the population.
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 they cannot. They can only have a child with type A or type O blood.
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
AB negative, A negative, B negative, O negative. Type AB is a universal receiver.
AB negative is a RH negative blood type.
AB negative is the rarest blood type. AB positive is the second rarest blood type. The negative blood types are more rare than the positive. The common blood type is o.
AB+ is the third rarest blood type. 1 person in 29 has AB+ which is 3.4% percent of the population.
It is not possible for two parents with blood type O negative to have a child with blood type AB. In the ABO blood group system, type O is recessive and AB is a combination of A and B, making it impossible for two parents with type O blood to produce a child with type AB blood.
AB - blood type is the rarest blood type, followed by AB + being the second rarest. Its usually not good to have a rare blood type, considering that its rare and if you ever need a blood transfer, your blood type would be harder to find. If your considering donating your rare blood, it'll definitely be useful towards the other few people with the same blood type that need a transfer.
An AB negative (AB-) individual can donate blood to recipients with AB+, AB-, A+, and A- blood types. This is because AB- blood contains both A and B antigens, making it compatible with those who have AB blood types, and it lacks the Rh factor, allowing it to be safely transfused to Rh-negative individuals. However, they cannot donate to O or B blood types, as those recipients would produce antibodies against the A and B antigens present in AB blood.
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 it isn't. The rarest is AB negative.
AB negative
AB negative