They can have a lot of blood-types
positive O
No, they only can donate to blood types A, and AB.
Family members are often the only people near and willing enough to donate many types of tissue, common examples being bone marrow and kidneys transplants. Because a mismatched donor organ or tissue sample can cause major problems if bloodtypes are not compatible, it is necessary to ensure that the bloodtypes are known so thaht risk is not carried.
Family members are often the only people near and willing enough to donate many types of tissue, common examples being bone marrow and kidneys transplants. Because a mismatched donor organ or tissue sample can cause major problems if bloodtypes are not compatible, it is necessary to ensure that the bloodtypes are known so thaht risk is not carried.
They cannot receive bloodtypes AB or B. They can receive bloodtypes A and O.
A, B, AB, and O each one can be negative or positive ex. A Rh positive A Rh negative
5 dogs
4 dogs and 3 cats
If you have six dogs living in a small apartment, then I would say yes, six dogs is too many. But if you have a house with a large yard, then six dogs isn't too many.
16 dogs...
No, a person's blood type remains the same throughout his life. The bloodtype is determined by the genes we inherit from our parents.
No. Two rhesus-negative parents cannot have a rhesus-positive child.