AB positive; a person with rhesus-negative blood can have an adverse reaction if given rhesus-positive blood.
ab
The four blood types are A, B, AB, and O. The universal donor is O and the universal recipient is AB
AB negative
People who have type O blood are universal donors, but not universal recipients. They can donate to anyone, but can only receive blood from another type O person. This is why type O blood is always in great demand by blood banks.
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.
No. Transfusions are categorized into different blood types. ABO blood types are the largest group. A person can have A, B, AB, or O type. The O is considered the universal donor and the AB is the universal recipient. That means that O is the preferred blood type of a person that is donating blood because it can be transfused into any other blood type. The AB is the preferred recipient because they can receive any of the blood types and not reject the agglutinogens, which are the proteins on the outside of red blood cells.
ab
There is no blood group that is considered as universal recipient. Blood type O individuals are considered to be universal donors.
People with AB blood are universal recipients, people with 0 negative blood are universal donors.
The four blood types are A, B, AB, and O. The universal donor is O and the universal recipient is AB
AB+ is the universal recipient.
The universal recipient blood type is AB. This blood type can receive A, B, AB, or O type bloods.
No. AB- is the rarest blood type and is not a universal recipient. Those who would be considered universal recipients are those with an AB+ blood type.
AB positive blood type is known as the universal recipient which means that persons with AB positive blood can recieve transfusions from any blood type, positive or negative. Generally, transfusions of the same blood type or of blood type O can be given. Persons with blood types that are RH positive can be given transfusions of either the positive OR negative subtype, but persons with RH negative blood types can only receive transfusions from other RH negative blood types.
Type AB POSITIVE is the universal red cell transfusion recipient. For plasma tranfusions, group O is the universal recipient.
No one blood type can be a recipient but O blood type can be given to anyone.
People with blood type O are universal donors, not universal recipients.