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i really dont know but i dont think it would be good. ask a doctor.

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What is likely to happen to a donor's cells if an Rh person who is sensitive Rh plus blood receives a transfusion of Rh plus blood?

If a donor's Rh-negative cells are transfused into an Rh-positive recipient, the recipient's immune system may recognize the Rh antigens as foreign and mount an immune response, leading to destruction of the donor's red blood cells. This can result in a reaction called hemolytic transfusion reaction.


What is likely to happen to a donor's cells if an Rh- person who is sensitive Rh plus blood receives a transfusion of Rh plus blood?

They will have what is called a transfusion reaction. The red blood cells will start to breakdown, the body will not get enough oxygen, the kidneys will fill up with protein from the blood, breathing will slow down or stop, and the person can go into shock and die.


Why are white blood cells used in blood transfusions?

White blood cells are typically removed from donated blood before transfusion to reduce the risk of transfusion reactions. This is because white blood cells can trigger immune responses in the recipient, leading to potential complications. By removing white blood cells, the transfusion process becomes safer and less likely to cause adverse reactions.


What is the process of transferring blood from one body to another?

The process of transferring blood from one body to another is called a blood transfusion. It involves collecting blood from a donor and then giving it to a recipient through an intravenous line. Before the transfusion, compatibility testing is done to ensure that the blood types match and that there is no risk of adverse reactions.


What is the basic principle of blood transfusion?

Blood type A have antigen A and anti- body B Blood type B have antigen B and anti- body A Blood type AB have antigens A and B and no anti- body Blood type O do not have antigen but have anti- bodies A and B

Related Questions

What is the difference between a blood donor and a recipient?

A blood donor is an individual who gives blood voluntarily for transfusion to another person in need, while a blood recipient is someone who receives the donated blood during a transfusion procedure to treat a medical condition or injury. Donors provide the blood, while recipients receive it for medical treatment.


What risks for a recipient in a blood transfusion are there?

The blood given by transfusion must be matched with the recipient's blood type. Incompatible blood types can cause a serious adverse reaction (transfusion reaction). Blood is introduced slowly by gravity flow directly into the veins


A person receives blood or blood parts during what?

blood transfusion


What is the term for taking blood from one donor and introducing it into a recipient?

Blood Transfusion


Can Muslims have a blood transfusion?

Blood transfusion does NOT depend on which religion a person belongs. All that is taken into account is the compatibility of the blood group pf the donor and the recipient.


Which test is performed to determine the compatibility of a blood donor and recipient before a blood transfusion?

crossmatching


Is Blood types checked before a transfusion?

In most cases, blood type of the recipient AND donor are checked. In a case of extreme emergency, the recipient blood type may not be checked and they will receive group O NEG unmatched red cell transfusion.


What is an autotransfusion?

An autotransfusion is a blood transfusion in which a person receives their own, previously extracted, blood.


What does trans in transfuse mean?

Trans means across. So blood transfusion = move blood from source to recipient.


What is a blood infusion?

Blood infusion is a misused term for blood transfusion. This is where a person receives blood through an IV.


Which blood sample contained the universal recipient?

Type AB POSITIVE is the universal red cell transfusion recipient. For plasma tranfusions, group O is the universal recipient.


What would be the major concern for an individual with type a blood who receive a transfusion of type b blood?

the antibodies in the serum of the recipient