Yes, as long as the recipient is not a female of child-bearing age or someone who has developed an rh antibody due to a prior infusion of rh positive blood products. In the past, it was not uncommon for platelets to contain a little blood because the washing techniques were not as good as they are today. It's the blood that causes the rh complications, and not the platelets themselves. Sometimes it's unavoidable, and rh positive platelets have to be given to an rh negative patient, even at child-bearing age. In those cases, the doctor may decide to administer Rhogam to the recipient, prior to transfusion. The Rhogam attaches itself to the rh positive red blood cells, that might be contaminating the platelets, and this allows those cells to be removed from the recipients circulation and they will not form rh antibodies. These days, washing techniques for platelets are much better and the chances of rh complications are very low. Doctors don't generally like to take even the slightest chance with females of child-bearing age.
A person who is blood type AB has to be genotype AB. A person who is blood type O has to be genotype OO. So if a person who is AB mates with a person who is O, they cannot have a baby with type O. They could have an A or a B, but not O or AB.
The AB blood type is known as the universal recipient. Therefore, the groups that a person with this blood type can give blood to are limited. If your blood is AB+, then you can only give to others with AB+ blood. If your blood is AB-, then you can give to people with both AB+ or AB- blood.
TYPESDISTRIBUTIONRATIOSO+ 1 person in 3 38.4%O- 1 person in 15 7.7%A+ 1 person in 3 32.3%A-1 person in 16 6.5%B+ 1 person in 12 9.4%B- 1 person in 67 1.7%AB+ 1 person in 29 3.2%AB-1 person in 167 0.7%
Yes, people with AB positive blood can receive O positive blood. In fact, AB+ can receive *any* blood, A, B, O, or AB, positive or negative. It is the other blood types that have restrictions.
For an AB positive blood group, a compatible life partner would be someone with any blood type, as AB positive individuals can receive blood from any blood type and can donate to AB positive and AB negative individuals. Compatibility for having children would depend on the specific blood types and potential genetic issues.
A person who is blood type AB has to be genotype AB. A person who is blood type O has to be genotype OO. So if a person who is AB mates with a person who is O, they cannot have a baby with type O. They could have an A or a B, but not O or AB.
A Positive can RECEIVE A+, A-, O+, and O- blood. A Positive can DONATE to A+, and AB+ O Positive can DONATE to A+, B+, O+, and AB+. O Positive can RECEIVE O+ and O- blood only. As far as conception and what the child would be and if there would be any complications directly linked to the blood type, The possible combinations of blood type for the child would be AO+ (thus being "A Positive) or OO+ (Thus being "O Positive) and since both blood types are "+" (meaning they both contain the protein), then there should be no incompatibility problems.
No, but she can give to you, so long as the negative and positive match up. (Negative can give to both negative and positive, positive can only give to positive). O can give to everyone; A can only give to A o B; B can only give to B or AB; and AB can give to AB (but not O). if you dont follow those rules your body will reject it and you may die :(
The chief advantage of having type AB positive blood is the ability to accept a blood donation from a person of any blood type. AB + is called the universal recipient.
Type O positive can give to O+, A+, B+, AB+.
If the mother is O+, the child not be AB+ under any circumstances.
Yes, you can
this doesnt effect personality but you can have O positive, A positive, B positive, and AB positive. so all blood types can be positve. rh positive which is synthetic blood.
A person with type A blood can donate blood to a person with type A or type AB.
A person with O positive blood is compatible for transfusion with other blood types that are also positive (O positive and AB positive). However, O positive blood can also be safely transfused to patients with A positive and B positive blood types in certain circumstances.
The AB blood type is known as the universal recipient. Therefore, the groups that a person with this blood type can give blood to are limited. If your blood is AB+, then you can only give to others with AB+ blood. If your blood is AB-, then you can give to people with both AB+ or AB- blood.
Since the antibodies in blood group AB are absent, the donor's RBC in the recipient's body will not agglutinate because agglutination will occur when the natural antibodies of the pasma of the recipient's body will react with the foriegn antigen.