Yes, of course it is possible to draft skin of one person to the other even when both have blood relation. But it is the concerned surgeon who can get the various tests done and determine that whether the skin can be drafted or not.
A blood relation is a person who is related to another through birth as opposed as through marriage.
No, a person having o-negative blood cannot receive blood from a person having o-positive blood because it will cause coagulation of blood
Yes. There are two possible genotypes for a person with type B blood: BB or BO. If a person with the BB genotype has children with a person with type O blood, then all of their children will have type B blood. But, it the person has the BO genotype, then any child they have will have a 50% chance of having type O blood.
No, they're not blood related. They'll only have a relation if it has to do with the will of the person.
The two possible genotypes for a person with blood type A are AA and AO.
Yes, it is possible for a person with blood type A and a person with blood type B to have a child with blood type O.
The child will most likely be type B (genotype BO), however if the B parent is type BO, the child may be type O.
No, to donate blood safely the donor and the recipient have to have the same blood type.
Yes, blood type combinations have no relevance on the viability of childbirth.
Cousins.
because there is a trace of B blood in AB blood they can receive B blood>
The noun 'relation' is an abstract noun as a word for the connection or relevance of one person or thing to another; a word for a concept.The noun 'relation' is a concrete noun as a word for a someone connected by blood or marriage to another; a word for a person.