No, someone can only be given blood with the same blood type as their own. If the wrong type is administered, it could be fatal.
No. Persons with type O blood can only receive type O blood.
Type A blood can be given to patients with type A or AB blood. Type B blood can be given to patients with type B or AB blood Type AB blood can only be given to patients with type AB blood. Type O blood can be given to patients with any blood type. The plus means the Rhetus group of the blood, which isn't as important as the blood type (A, B, AB or O), meaning there usually aren't complications even if blood of the wrong Rhetus group is given to a patient. In modern medicine, however, patients are nearly always given the blood of their own blood type, if possible.
No. O types must receive blood from other O types.
No because O has to have O but O can be given to anyone that needs it because O is the universal donor
no O's get ONLY from O but O can give to everybody
A and O blood group
Can B+ type blood be transfused into O type blood in humans?
Yes. O negative red cells can be given to any other blood type.
yes it is possible if one person in parent with A blood group
They will be fine because I know someone who has tried it.
O negative can be given to a person with any bloodtype, but if possible it is better for a person requiring transfusion to be given blood matching their own bloodtype.
Yes. There are two possible genotypes for a person with type B blood: BB or BO. If a person with the BB genotype has children with a person with type O blood, then all of their children will have type B blood. But, it the person has the BO genotype, then any child they have will have a 50% chance of having type O blood.