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Theoretically, there is many options depending if the perent allele types are homo or heterozygous, i will explain the options :

IBIB X IA IA

100% of the kids will be AB-blood type

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IBi X IAi

25% AB

25% B

25% A

25% O

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IBIB X IAi

50% AB

50% B

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IBi X IA IA

50% AB

50% A

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so kids could have A,B,AB,O blood types.

and about the Rh+

the highest possibility will be + blood types.

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15y ago

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Do I need to be the same blood type as my egg donor?

For blood types, you must consider the antigens and antibodies that are involved. epending on the presence or absense of these proteins, a person may have A, B, AB, or O blood. With pregnancy the chief concern is the Rh factor, which determines whether somebody is positive or negative. If mom is positive and da is positive, then the baby will be positive for the Rh factor, and there will be no complications. This same concept occurs for parents that are both negative for the Rh factor. If mmom is positive and dad is negative, then the dominant gene (positive) will be found in the baby and there will be no problems. However, if mom is negative and dad is positive, then the baby will attain a positive Rh factor and be inside the mom's (negative) body. Then, the om's body will produce antibodies to ward off the foreign blood of the baby, possibly killing it. As long as a doctor is informed of this, the mom can take shot periodically to prevent the production of such antibodies an keep the baby safe.


How can a child's blood type be A positive if mom is O positive and dad is AB negative?

If one parent is O positive and the other is AB negative, the child could inherit the A allele from the O positive parent and the Rh factor from the AB negative parent, resulting in the child being A positive. Each parent passes on one allele for blood type and one allele for Rh factor, so different combinations are possible.


Can a baby be born with o positive blood if mom is a positive and dad in o negative?

It's possible if both parents are heterozygous for both Rh factor and ... type-A-ness, whatever the word for that is. That is if they're both +- and AO genetically, they'd both have blood type A positive, but they'd both have the potential to pass along blood type O and Rh factor negative. If the baby gets O- from both mom and dad, then the baby would be OO -- and therefore O negative.It's not necessarily what you would expect (7 times out of 8, the baby would be type A, Rh postive, or both), but it is possible.If they have a B negative baby, mom's been fooling around on dad.


How is my child ab positive when dad is a positive and mom is o posative?

http://www.thetech.org/genetics/ask.php?id=71 this should answer your question.


Can an O negative mother with RH negative and an O positive father make an A positive baby?

YES. Blood type is determined by two alleles. An "A" individual can be homozygous "AA" or heterozygous "AO" and still be considered type A. The same is true of a "B" individual. If the father is "AO" and the mother is "BO" then statistically, they have a 25% chance of having a child that is "OO" or type O.