who donate to group o negative?
A person with Type O can donate to any other blood type, but can only receive blood from another Type O person. A person having blood group O (with absence of Rh-factor) only can donate his blood to any other individual. Rh or Antigen-D is a factor which decides the positivity or negativity of the blood, so the blood group O-negative is considered the universal donor, as it does not effect any of other blood groups.
For two parents to have a child with type O negative blood group, both parents must have at least one O and one negative Rh factor allele. The possible parental blood group combinations could be O negative x O negative, O negative x O positive, A negative x O negative, or B negative x O negative.
Yes, O positive can donate red blood cells to AB negative. O positive is a universal donor for red blood cells, meaning it can be transfused to individuals with any blood type. However, O positive donors are not universal plasma donors for AB negative recipients.
A person with B type blood can donate to a patient with B type blood and to the universal receiver. The universal receiver is type AB+. A person who does not carry the Rh factor, which means they are either B negative, AB negative or O negative, cannot receive B positive or AB positive blood.
Yes, people with blood group O can donate to those with blood group AB, as AB individuals can receive blood from all blood types. However, it is always recommended to consult with a healthcare professional or blood donation center for specific guidelines and eligibility criteria.
O negative
Nope - O negative is the only group that can be safely given to the patient if their blood group is unknown.
because it is a real universal donor and can donate to every blood group safely.
O negative is the universal donor. This means that anyone can have a transfusion of O neg, despite their blood type.
no
Blood group A and also blood group O can. Blood group O can donate blood to any blood group- universal donor.
A person with Type O can donate to any other blood type, but can only receive blood from another Type O person. A person having blood group O (with absence of Rh-factor) only can donate his blood to any other individual. Rh or Antigen-D is a factor which decides the positivity or negativity of the blood, so the blood group O-negative is considered the universal donor, as it does not effect any of other blood groups.
For two parents to have a child with type O negative blood group, both parents must have at least one O and one negative Rh factor allele. The possible parental blood group combinations could be O negative x O negative, O negative x O positive, A negative x O negative, or B negative x O negative.
Yes, O positive can donate red blood cells to AB negative. O positive is a universal donor for red blood cells, meaning it can be transfused to individuals with any blood type. However, O positive donors are not universal plasma donors for AB negative recipients.
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
People with A Positive blood can only donate to people with blood types A or AB, not any other. You can donate to people outside your blood type group, though only to AB People.
No, an O Positive person cannot donate to an A Negative person because the person who is Negative, or Rh Negative, will react to the Positive (Rh Positive) blood. Negative can only get Negative, Positive can get Positive or Negative.