What you mean is probably bilirubin.
Possibly 'Gilberts syndrome' a failure of the liver to effectively absorb billiruben. Usually shows in the eyes before the skin. Not dangerous, no cure as it is a genetic default.
**Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them. Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
**Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them. Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
**Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them. Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
No. O is recessive, therefore if both parents are O they do not have the A gene and can therefore not pass it on to a child. **Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them. Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
Yes, it is possible for an A+ father and a B- mother to have an O child biologically. Blood type inheritance follows specific patterns, and parental blood types do not directly determine the child's blood type. The child's blood type will depend on the combination of genes received from the parents.
My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them. As it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
AnswerWe are looking for the possible blood types of a MOTHER Available information:Father type O neg-- can only be OO Rh (--)Genes: O, (-)Baby type A pos-- can be AA or AO with Rh (++) or (+-)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO Rh (+-)Mother must be Type A pos -- AA or AO and Rh (++) or (+-)Contributing genes: A, O, (+), (-)YES, since the father is contributing an O and (-), the baby might be Type A+, if the mother gives him the A and (+) genes. HOWEVER: There is more to ABO blood typing that just the ABO gene.There is also an inhibitory gene that will change any genotype into the phenotype O.Therefore a person with genetically AB blood can be tested as having Type O.Baby is type A+ which can be genetically AA or AOIf one or both parents has the inhibitory gene affecting their AA, AO or AB type, then you can have two Type O parents (one Rh neg & other Rh pos) with a Type A offstpring.**Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them.Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens
YES it can, I AM proof of this, If a parent has a RECESSIVE gene, it can happen. Both my parents are O and my sister is O and here I am.. an "A" blood type! I did some research and of course the internet says "NOPE... your mom screwed around". I say BULL CRAP! I called the American Red Cross and they did some testing and found out that I am a RARE person with RARE blood typing. I am known as that OA blood where A shows up in tests as my blood type and O is the recessive gene for me. My sister could marry a man (having O as well as her) and end up with an A child.So to all those out there than say "NO" it can' GUESS AGAIN!!! It can and HAS!Another answerMy son is also proof of this anomaly! My husband and I are both type-0 and our son is type A.Side note: Type-0 is actually not the letter "O" but a zero for lack of a functional protein, therefore it does not contain the antigens that would precipitate an immune reaction to foreign antigens.Another answerSince I am a blood type of O positive and my son is A positive, I wanted to know my daughters blood type in case something bad happened to get to the e.r. She is blood type A positive too. My son's father was A positive and died. My daughter's father is O positive like me. We are still together. I was surprised to hear she was A positive as well. The head nurse told me that though it is rare, it can happen since my father was A positive it can skip a generation. She also inherited my father's blue eyes. Everyone else has green. Believe what you may. Find out the truth yourself.Another answerYes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type O pos -- can only have OO and Rh (++) or (+-)Genes to contribute: O, (+), (-)Father type O neg -- can only have OO and Rh (--)Genes to contribute: O, (-)Baby recieves one gene from each parent:Baby is type OO (+-)Baby is type OO (--)Generally speaking, because only one ABO gene can be contributed [O], the baby can only be Type OHOWEVER: There is more to ABO blood typing that just the ABO gene.There is also an inhibitory gene that will change any genotype into the phenotype O.Therefore a person with genetically AB blood can be tested as having Type O.Baby is type A+ which can be genetically AA or AOIf one parent has the inhibitory gene affecting their AA, AO or AB type,then the Type A baby is definitely possible.___________________________________________________________ **Yes. My son is 0- and my daughter in law is 0+ and they just had a A+ baby boy. It is very rare but the doctor said it can happen because every has a primary and secondary (recessive) blood gene. Since my d-i-law's father is A+ and her mother is 0+ and his parents are both 0+ but his mothers mother is A+ and her Father is 0+ there are many recessive A+ genes in their DNA blood type therefore they can have a A+ child. (Example mother is O+/A+ and father is 0-/A+ equals= A+/0 child.) 0 seems to be universal and can throw off a recessive gene. In our case; since it is rare; the baby and the mother's blood types caused him to have alot of jaundice (18) so he had to go back in hospital to be under the light for an additional 24 hours to bring it down. She was nursing and her milk had not come in to give him the fluids to fight off the excess billiruben count. Other than that; it will not be a problem for either of them.Hope this helps, as it is hard to find this information on the Internet. Most sights say no because they are stating the normal without considering the recessive secondary gene type that are rare. Ask a doctor .....it happens