People who are of the blood type B can only receive type B or type O.
Type A people can receive type A or type O
Type AB people can receive type A, B, or O
Type O people can only receive type O
If you have blood type B with antibody A, you can safely receive blood from donors with blood types B and O. Blood type B individuals have antibodies against blood type A, so receiving blood from donors with blood type A or AB can elicit an immune response.
No...someone with a B blood type has anti-A antibodies so the A blood type in the AB blood would cause clotting.
A person with A negative blood will form antibodies to Rh + and to B
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, they cannot. A person with O+ blood has a special antigen, or protein, on its extracellular membrane. The person with O- blood will form antibodies to the antigen and attack the O+ red blood cells killing them, this will eventually cause anemia and become a health problem.
a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.
because there is a trace of B blood in AB blood they can receive B blood>
B and o
Type b or o
A person with type A blood can donate blood to a person with type A or type AB. A person with type B blood can donate blood to a person with type B or type AB. A person with type AB blood can donate blood to a person with type AB only. A person with type O blood can donate to anyone. A person with type A blood can receive blood from a person with type A or type O. A person with type B blood can receive blood from a person with type B or type O. A person with type AB blood can receive blood from anyone. A person with type O blood can receive blood from a person with type O. hope this helps, #JC# http://www.fi.edu/learn/heart/blood/types.html
No. It can only receive the blood coming from a person with type O.
because in blood group B anti-A antibodies are present.
If you have blood type B with antibody A, you can safely receive blood from donors with blood types B and O. Blood type B individuals have antibodies against blood type A, so receiving blood from donors with blood type A or AB can elicit an immune response.
A person with type B blood can only receive type B or O because it is said to be compatible and will not clump.
Blood types A and B are incompatible because a type A person has naturally occurring Anti-B in his blood and a type B person has naturally occurring Anti-A. Thus a type A person can not receive blood from a type B person because the naturally occurring anti-A would destroy the type A person's red cells. The converse is true for a type B person who can not receive type A blood since the Anti-B found in the type A blood would destroy the type B person's red cells.
A person with type B blood can receive blood from donors with type B or type O blood. This is because type B individuals have B antigens on their red blood cells and anti-A antibodies in their plasma. Type O blood is considered the universal donor for individuals with type B blood.
No...someone with a B blood type has anti-A antibodies so the A blood type in the AB blood would cause clotting.