Yes, the blood type of a person does not prevent a person from having children. Having O negative blood will not prevent a man from having children.
The only issue comes when an RH Positive man tries to have children with an RH Negative woman. This causes problems, due to subsequent rejection reactions by the mother, but they can be handled if they are known in advance. Talk to your doctor.
RH- and RH+ are not blood types, they are factors.
They could potentially develop an antibody.
i know im rh neg and my 2 brothers are rh neg. So i guess we ar eok. i have 3 children myself, but i dont know their blood type.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type O neg --can only be OO with Rh (--) = contributes genes O, (-)Father type A neg --can be AA or AO with Rh (--) = contributes A, O, (-)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO with Rh (--) = Type A negBaby is type OO with Rh (--) = Type O negRh negative blood requires two negative genes. Since both parents are negative, there is no positive gene to offer the offspring, so the children will all be Rh negative.
i would guess Rh neg.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type A negative -- can be AA or AO and Rh (--)Genes: A, O, (-)Father type A -- can be AA or AO and Rh (--)Genes: A, O, (-)Baby recieves one gene from each parent: Baby is type AA Rh (--) = Type A negBaby is type AO Rh (--) = Type A negBaby is type OO Rh (--) = Type O negIf both parents are A neg, then they would have an Type A neg or O neg child. The child cannot B because the parents do not carry a B gene, and cannot be Rh positive since neither parent carries the Rh (+) gene.
O negative blood type is produced when a person inherits two O alleles and has a negative Rh factor. This means the person's blood lacks A, B, and Rh antigens, making it compatible with all blood types during transfusions.
Of course! Depending on the genotypes of the parents, the child could be an A or O blood type. And because both parents are Rh negative, the baby can only be Rh negative. To sum it up, the baby may be either A neg or O neg.
The negative in "O Negative" means that it's Rh negative, meaning that anyone, either positive or negative can receive that Rh type. O negative blood can be given to anyone. It's the Universal Donor.
Yes. If the A rh neg parent has genotype A/A or A/O and rh-/- and the B parent has genotype B/O and rh+/- or +/+ The first parent gives their A to the child and the second partner gives a rh+ (but not their B, and this is why they cannot be B/B) to the child. The child ends up with genotype A/O rh+/-, which would be expressed as blood group A rhesus +.
Can a child with RH neg blood come from parents that are A positive and A negative
A Rh negative mother can have multiple pregnancies and children without any issues. However, if the mother's blood type is Rh-negative and the father's is Rh-positive, there may be a risk of Rh incompatibility in subsequent pregnancies. This can be managed with medical interventions like Rh immunoglobulin to prevent complications.