Type 'O'
blood type A
blood type A
blood type A
A type
The anti-clumping protein in blood type A is anti-B antibodies. These antibodies are produced by individuals with blood type A to protect against foreign blood cells that have B antigens. They help prevent clumping or agglutination when incompatible blood types are mixed.
They are not compatable and there will be clumping and clotting.
If there is no clumping in anti-Rh serum, it indicates that the blood type is Rh-negative. This means that the blood does not have the Rh factor (D antigen) on the surface of its red blood cells. In contrast, if the blood were Rh-positive, clumping would occur due to the presence of the Rh factor.
First you must have a type and screen which determines your blood type. Then the blood get cross-matched to see if it is a good fit. There are many factors that must be considered before a person receives blood. Of course in a trauma situation where there is no time to type, screen and cross match patients always receive Type O negative blood as this is the "Universal Donor."
I think it is the amount of a certain type of proteins Google proteins and blood type to get a better answer
Packed red blood cells type A do not contian enough Anti-B antibody to cause a reaction in AB type people. The plasma (liquid portion of blood) contains the antibodies. This is mostly removed when blood products are processed in a blood bank. Antibodies are what causes red blood cells to agglutinate (clump)
The clumping of blood is known as a blood clot. :)
blood type proteins are found on the surface of the red blood cells that are like id tags