no. The ABO system and Rh blood group are already decided the moment sperm meets ovum. It is decided by the gene we have.
For ABO classification, to put it simply people with A blood type has two A gene or one A gene plus one O gene. People with B type have two B gene or one B gene plus one O gene. People with AB type has one A gene and one B gene. O type has two O genes. A father passes one of his blood gene to his child and a mother passes one as well that the child now has two, and the combination is what decides the child's blood type.
Bombay type is a very rare blood type different from A, B, or O. You can only have it if your family has a very rare gene, or in other words, if one of your family has it.
It would be a good combination.
Yes, it is possible for a mother with blood group O and a father with blood group AB to have a child with blood group O. This would occur if the child inherited the O allele from the mother and the O allele from the father.
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
which blood group can be donate to all other groups? "O" positive blood group. it's called universal donor.
Yes, parents with O and A blood types can have a child with A- blood type. The child would inherit one A allele from the parent with A blood type and one negative Rh factor from the parent with O blood type.
no.
No. One would have to be A or AB.
When the parents are with blood group AB and O, the possible blood group of the child would be either A or B. This is because the blood group AB has the genotype AB and blood group O has the genotype OO. Thus upon recombination, the only outcomes would be AO - meaning blood group A, or BO- meaning blood group B.
Because the blood cells from the O-group donor have no antigens which would react with the A-antibodies in the recipient.
It would be a good combination.
No, because their blood also has the B Antigen which would cause a tranfusion reaction in the recipient.
Yes, it is possible for a mother with blood group O and a father with blood group AB to have a child with blood group O. This would occur if the child inherited the O allele from the mother and the O allele from the father.
to blood group B and AB.
People with blood group AB can receive blood from other blood groups but cannot donate to them because of antibodies carried on the red blood cells of group AB donors that would destroy the red cells of a blood recipient from another group.
The child will have AB as her Blood group Not necessarily. If maternal blood group is A(AO) and paternal group is B(BO) then baby could inherit A from mum and O from dad - O is always recessive so blood group would be A Rh grouping (neg or pos) is inherited as a triplet code so could be either pos or neg
i would guess Rh neg.
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.