Type O or type A broadly speaking.
it also depends on other proteins found on the surface of donated blood cells such as rhesus proteins. someone can be rhesus plus or rhesus minus meaning they either have the protein or don't. You can only receive blood of the same rhesus type of as your own
for example:
A rhesus positive can only receive A rhesus positive or O rhesus positive
Blood type A can receive a transfusion from blood types A and AB.
Depending on whether you are A+ or A- you can receive different types of blood. If you have A+ blood you can often receive blood from A+, A-, O+, and O-. However, if you are A- you can only usually receive blood from A- and 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. Negative blood types must receive negative blood. AB- can receive AB-, A-, B-, or O- blood.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.
It depends if you are A pos or A neg. If you are A pos, you can receive A pos, A neg, O pos, and O neg. If you are A neg, you can receive A neg, or O neg. The reason for this is that if you are A neg and receive Rh positive blood, it is possible you may develop an Anti-D antibody (Rh antibody)which would cause you to have a reaction to further transfusion of Rh positive units.
Blood type A can receive a transfusion from blood types A and AB.
Depending on whether you are A+ or A- you can receive different types of blood. If you have A+ blood you can often receive blood from A+, A-, O+, and O-. However, if you are A- you can only usually receive blood from A- and O-.
A person with type O can receive only type O blood.
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.
Yes, it can
Type O can receive type O. Type A can receive type O or A. Type B can receive type O or B. Type AB can receive type O, A, B, or AB.
The blood type AB is a universal receiver meaning it can receive blood from blood types A, B, AB, and O.
AB blood types can receive blood from any donors, also known as "Universal Recipients". Your blood, however, can only be received by other AB types. To contrast, type O blood types can give blood to anyone, but can only receive type O blood.
Not taking Rh Factor into consideration, O is the universal donor. All blood types can receive type O. For information, AB is the universal recipient. They can take any blood type. Remember, this excludes the Rh Factor.
Blood type is determined by the type of antigen
Platelets do not have blood types, so anyone can receive them from anyone else.
Blood type during donations is asked because it is critical that blood types are matched. There are 4 human blood types: A, AB, B, and O. AB and B people can only accept their own blood type and O. A can receive all three other blood types. O can only receive it's own. If you get the wrong blood type you can die.