no
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
Question doesn't make sense. You can be group B and rh + or group B and rh -. The B antigen and the D antigen (which causes you to be rh+ or lack of makes you rh-) are seperate things stuck to the surface of red blood cells.
Yes. If both parents are heterozygous (rh+ rh-) for rh factor, they could each pass on an rh- allele to the child and it will be rh negative. As for blood group, as long as the child inherits either two A alleles (AA) or one A and one O allele, it will have the A blood group.
It depends on the genotype of the Rh+ parent. If that person is heterozygous, then yes there is a 50% chance of an Rh- baby.Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive heterozygous)Rh +Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh - Rh -http://www.bloodbook.com/inherited.htmlIf the positive parent is homozygous, the baby will be positive:Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive homozygous)Rh +Rh +Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh + Rh -
The Rh negative blood group lady should receive an injection of Rh immunoglobulin to prevent her body from producing antibodies against the Rh positive blood group and protect future pregnancies. It is important to follow up with healthcare providers for monitoring and guidance.
RH- and RH+ are not blood types, they are factors.
Rh factor or rehsus factor is also involved in blood groups. either a person is Rh+ or Rh- if u are A+ then u have blood group A and you are Rh+ if you are A- then you have blood group A and you are Rh-
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
I think Rh is not a blood group. Rh stands for a factor and derived its name from factor found in the blood of Rhesus monkey.
The significant Rh antigen most care about is D antigen and all A+, B+, AB+ or O+ blood types have the Rh Antigen. The positive is used to indicate the D antigen. There are different, in fact numerous kind of blood groups. While the ABO blood group is one example the Rh blood group is another one. The Rh blood group has 5 antigens: D C c E & e. Everyone has Rh antigens one or the other but out of Rh antigens the most important one is D. If a person has D anitgen then he/she is said to be Rh+ if not Rh-.
O Rh- is the universal donor and AB Rh- is the universal recipient of all blood types.
We can find out our blood positivity or negativity by RH-antigen.if RH-antigen is available in the blood then the blood group will be positive and if it is not available in the blood then the blood group will be Negative.
O Rh- is the universal donor and AB Rh- is the universal recipient of all blood types.
The Rh blood group is determined by a single gene with two alleles-- positive and negative. The positive (Rh+) allele is dominant, so persons who are Rh+/Rh+ or Rh+/Rh- are said to be Rh-positive. Individuals with two Rh- alleles are Rh-negative. Citation Hall, Prentice "Biology" Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 2002 Page 344 in human genes subtitle, blood group genes subsection , paragraph 2
it is a part of blood group. 95% people are Rh +ve, only 5% people are Rh negative.
I assume what you are talking about is D antigen in Rh (Rhesus) blood group system. Rh blood group system is the most important blood group system after ABO blood group system (i.e. type A (AA, AO), type AB, type B (BB, BO), type O (OO) ). The Rh blood group system consists of 50 defined blood-group antigens and the 5 antigens D, C, c, E, and e are the most important. The commonly-used terms Rh factor, Rh positive and Rh negative refer to the D antigen only. Rh factor (Rh- and Rh + depending on D antigen neg/pos) is important for blood transfusion and prevention of hemolytic disease of the newborn or erythroblastosis fetalis (basically the baby and mom have different blood type - Rh- and Rh+ and cause severe immune response - fatal to the newborn)
Question doesn't make sense. You can be group B and rh + or group B and rh -. The B antigen and the D antigen (which causes you to be rh+ or lack of makes you rh-) are seperate things stuck to the surface of red blood cells.