This is no problem at all. There are four major blood groups and two Rh factors in human beings. The major blood groups are A,B, AB and O, RH factors positive and negative. That is A,B, AB, O, rh factors positive and negative. Thaty is A,B, AB, O (+ve) or A,B,AB,O(-ve). So it is very common to be of the same group of blood in a couple. Nothing bad is happening or can happen in child bearing activity because of the same blood group or different blood group. There are many minor blood groups like M,N etc but they are not important for reproduction (or) blood transfusion.
Blood group incompatibility is possible sometimes but not always. In some situations where wife is RH-ve husband is Rh+ve and child in the womb is Rh+ve and there is mixing of maternal and foetal blood, then it can lead to abortions or hydropsfoetalis (abnormal newborn). This can be prevented by giving anti-D injections to mother while she is carrying the baby. Three hundred g every two months and one booster at the time of delivery. Very rarely ABO blood group incompatibility is seen. So you need not worry about your blood group and bearing a healthy child. Try to develop a positive attitude.
This is no problem at all. There are four major blood groups and two Rh factors in human beings. The major blood groups are A,B, AB and O, RH factors positive and negative. That is A,B, AB, O, rh factors positive and negative. Thaty is A,B, AB, O (+ve) or A,B,AB,O(-ve). So it is very common to be of the same group of blood in a couple. Nothing bad is happening or can happen in child bearing activity because of the same blood group or different blood group. There are many minor blood groups like M,N etc but they are not important for reproduction (or) blood transfusion.
Blood group incompatibility is possible sometimes but not always. In some situations where wife is RH-ve husband is Rh+ve and child in the womb is Rh+ve and there is mixing of maternal and fetal blood, then it can lead to abortions or hydropsfoetalis (abnormal newborn). This can be prevented by giving anti-D injections to mother while she is carrying the baby. Three hundred g every two months and one booster at the time of delivery. Very rarely ABO blood group incompatibility is seen. So you need not worry about your blood group and bearing a healthy child.
O Rhesus negative
No, a mother with blood group A Rh negative will not always have babies of the same gender. The gender of a baby is determined by the genetic contribution from both parents, not by the mother's blood type.
A baby's health does not depend on the blood group of parents.
Babies can be B or O.Cannot say + or -
yes it is possible if one person in parent with A blood group
In order for your baby to have type b blood, at least one parent must have either type b or type ab blood. Blood type probabilities can be determined for babies by using a blood group calculator. Once a baby is born, the babies' blood will be tested to determine blood type.
Yes! Yes indeed. Does the baby look like the mailman? No. O parents can't make AB babies.
I want unsubscribe from a babies in blue group
a group dance
No. I am Rh o negative. I have three sons and one daughter.
Blood type should only HELP to identify mixed up babies. There are only 8 possibilities and some are much more common than others. The probability of having the same blood group as the guy next to you is extremely high. Someone's blood group alone cannot PROVE anything. One would have to have genetic analysis to definitively check paternity...and even that is not exact (i.e. if the potential parents are brothers etc..). You can only EXCLUDE based on blood group...i.e. if the baby is a blood group that is an impossible combination from the parents in question. Baby's blood group can never verify that person X and person Y are the parents....only who the parents could not be.
If one is Rh negative and the other RH h positive I think it has something to do with the babies in the womb being possibly rejected by the Mothers body as a "foreign body". I have heard of some babies having a complete blood transfusion in the womb or early stages of their life ( I'm not 100% on that though ). Check with your Doctor.