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a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.
Can B+ type blood be transfused into O type blood in humans?
Blood type O can donate to blood type B because blood type O lacks A and B antigens on the surface of red blood cells, and blood type B does not have antibodies against blood type O. This means there is no reaction when blood type O is transfused to blood type B.
His blood type is AB.
Blood type A carries the A antigen on red blood cells and anti-B antibodies in the plasma. This means individuals with blood type A can receive blood from donors with type A or O, but not from those with type B or AB.
Yes. All blood types have hemoglobin. The ABO blood groups only refer to a sugar on the surface of red blood cells. Blood type O do not have this sugar.
In the context of blood types, the letters B and O refer to specific antigens present on the surface of red blood cells. Blood type B has the B antigen, while blood type O lacks both A and B antigens. Therefore, type B blood has B antigens and type O blood is considered a universal donor due to the absence of these antigens.
You can use a blood type kit on yourself by using a strip to test the blood you have drawn. If you refer to Web MD you can find more information about reading the results of your test.
Yes, "C" is a blood group antigen but not a specific blood type. Blood types refer to the ABO system (A, B, AB, O) and the Rh system (positive or negative). The "C" antigen is part of the Rh system.
Blood type percentages refer to the number of people with a specific blood type within a population. For example in the United States, Hispanic people have a relatively high number of people with blood type O, at the same time Asian people tend to have a higher percentage of people with type B blood.
Individuals with type A blood produce anti-B antibodies and individuals with type B produce anti A. There are many sub groups of blood antibodies such as D (Rh) but we usually only refer to the ABO systems.
Blood type AB and type O refer to different blood group systems, and neither is inherently "stronger" than the other; they simply have different properties. Type AB blood has both A and B antigens and can receive blood from all other types, making it a universal recipient. In contrast, type O blood lacks A and B antigens, allowing it to be donated to all other blood types, making it a universal donor. The strength or suitability of blood types depends on the context of transfusion or compatibility rather than a direct comparison of strength.
Blood type phenotypes refer to the observable characteristics of an individual's blood, primarily determined by the presence or absence of specific antigens on the surface of red blood cells. The main blood type phenotypes are A, B, AB, and O, which correspond to the presence of A antigens, B antigens, both A and B antigens, or neither (respectively). Additionally, each blood type can be classified as Rh-positive or Rh-negative based on the presence of the Rh factor. This results in eight possible blood type phenotypes: A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-, O+, and O-.
a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.
If both parents have type A blood then the baby should have type A blood. or type O blood
The universal donor blood type is O negative. This blood type can be given to individuals of any blood type. The universal receiver blood type is AB positive. This blood type can receive blood from individuals of any blood type.
blood type A has type A antigens. blood type B has type B antigens.