It is entirely possible for a parent to have a child with a different blood type.
What you may be asking is about the danger of Hemolytic disease associated with giving birth to a child with a different blood type. In rare circumstances, the fetal blood can cross the placenta and enter the mother's blood. If the blood type is incompatible, the mother will develop antibodies against the fetal blood. This, by itself is not a problem. However, if the woman has a second child with an incompatible blood type, the antibodies can cross the placenta into the fetus, resulting in a life-threatening condition for the fetus.
This typically happens with mothers with Rh-negative blood, where the fetus is Rh-positive, due to the father's genes. There are successful treatments and preventative measures for this condition.
Yes, it is possible for a father with blood type A and a mother with blood type B to have a baby who is male or female with blood type AB if the baby inherits one A allele from the father and one B allele from the mother. In the ABO blood group system, the A and B alleles are codominant, meaning both can be expressed in the offspring.
It happens when the father is of a positive blood group (having Rhesus (Rh) factor) and mother of a negative blood group (devoid of Rh factor), the fetes' blood group will be of the positive type, i.e., having Rh factor as having Rh factor is a dominant trait and can mask the negative blood group. So, this creates problems for the kid as well as mother during pregnancy. Usually, the first pregnancy will not have much complications. But, the second pregnancy onwards, the antibodies present in the mother from the first pregnancy will be present and is harmful for the fetes. It happens when the father is of a positive blood group (having Rhesus (Rh) factor) and mother of a negative blood group (devoid of Rh factor), the fetes' blood group will be of the positive type, i.e., having Rh factor as having Rh factor is a dominant trait and can mask the negative blood group. So, this creates problems for the kid as well as mother during pregnancy. Usually, the first pregnancy will not have much complications. But, the second pregnancy onwards, the antibodies present in the mother from the first pregnancy will be present and is harmful for the fetes.
no, if both parents are A still there is a chance of O baby ,but for the child to have A blood type atleast one of the parents must have A or AB blood group Parents having the following blod groups may have an A baby AA and AA baby will have A blood group only AA and AO baby with A group only AO and AO baby may have A or O blood group AB and OO baby with A or B blood group AA and OO baby with A blood group only AAand AB baby with A or AB blood group AO and BO baby of A AB B or O blood group AO and AB baby of A AB or B blood group AB and AB baby having A B or AB blood group (each individual has one,two or no antigens .when no antigen it results in O blood group ,when one or two A antigens ,the person has A blood group so its not necessary that both parents of A blood group child have A blood type
No. For a person to be "O" blood type, they have a phenotype of O, which can only come about if they have a genotype of OO. If both mother and father are O's then they have no B that they can donate to the baby.
The baby could be either B positive or O positive. The baby's blood type is determined by the combination of genes from the mother and father. Since the father's blood type is O positive, the baby has a chance of inheriting either B or O from the mother.
Yes an AA mother can marry an AA father, when they give birth, it wil result to an AA children
The second baby, normally. Erythroblastosis Foetalis is when a baby with a positive blood group is born to a mother of a negative blood group, and the mother has been 'sensitized' during a previous pregnancy. The mother's body identifies the fetus as a 'foreign' protein and her body's immune system tries to fight the foreign protein, much like an allergic reaction.
baby blood group will be A or O
Yes, it is possible for a father with blood type A and a mother with blood type B to have a baby who is male or female with blood type AB if the baby inherits one A allele from the father and one B allele from the mother. In the ABO blood group system, the A and B alleles are codominant, meaning both can be expressed in the offspring.
The child could either be blood type A or blood type B.
Yes, it is possible.
B+
This can be a cause if the baby had a low blood count from birth or very shortly after, especially if this is not the first pregnancy. Hemolytic disease of the newborn can be caused by the mother's antibodies attacking the baby's red blood cells if the baby if Rh positive and the mother is Rh negative. The antibodies get into the baby before birth, however, so if the baby developed a low blood count at 3 months it would not be because of the negative/positive blood type.
Nothing happens, also nothing happens to their babies. Because the mother is Rhesus positive she won't make antibody's against the baby's blood. The only danger is when a Rh negative mother gives birth to a Rh positive child. RV
baby can have type A or type B or type AB blood group
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
It is possible. It depends on the blood group of the mother.