For a baby with AB blood type : both parents should be AB. or one is AB and the other is B. or one is A and the other is B.
AB+ B+ or A+
AB negative is the rarest blood type. AB positive is the second rarest blood type. The negative blood types are more rare than the positive. The common blood type is o.
ab+ a+ b+
I would say the most uncommon blood types are the negative types. Which include O-, A-, B- and AB-. AB+ is quiet rare too but not as much as the negatives. AB- is currently the most uncommon blood type.
All children will be plus. and possible blood types are : B and O if geno-type of parents is heterozygous. and 100% B if geno-type of parents is homozygous. All Medical Answers need confirmation and re-confirmation.
On the contrary, bloodtype AB is not rare. Bloodtype AB is a great blood type since it can recieve blood from both bloodtypes A and B. The rarest bloodtype there is, is bloodtype O.
No, a Type AB blood donor could not give to a Type O recipient. The A & B refer to antigens, or proteins, on the surface of the red blood cells. Type O people have neither A nor B antigens, thus, their body rejects the donor blood, which has both A and B antigens. Here is a chart: Type Given Can Receive: O O, A, B, AB A A, AB B B, AB AB AB This is not exactly correct, but for the intents of your question, it should serve. The exact blood types would be O, A plus, A minus, B plus, B minus, AB plus, and AB minus.
There are ten, in order from most common to most rare: O+ O- A+ A- B+ B- AB+ AB-. O+ is the most common with AB- being the rarest
You could potentially be: A Positive B Positive AB Positive A Negative B Negative AB Negative
It depends on fathers blood type. If he is A or AB, child might be AB. Check the related links for more info.
Some rare types of blood include the Bombay blood group, which lacks some common antigens, and the Rh-null blood type, which lacks all Rh antigens. These rare blood types can make finding compatible blood for transfusions more challenging.