ABO stands for 4 most common blood antigens called A, B, AB and O. The person with Type A has antigen A, type B has antigen B and type AB has both A and B antigens. Type O has no A or B antigen.
Antibodies against these two antigens are found thus type A has anti B, type B has anti A, type O has anti A & anti B. Type AB has no antibodies. They can receive blood from any type.
Rh neg can go to Rh +/-
Rh pos can only go to Rh+
Type O neg blood is called the universal donor can be given to A, B, AB, O with Rh+ or Rh-
Type O pos blood can only go to O, A, B & AB pos
Type O blood can receive donation only from type O.
The 'universal donor' applies only to packed RBC's and not to whole blood products due to the anti bodies A and B found in serum. Type A, B, or AB given type O whole blood would produce a hemolytic transfusion reaction due to the antibodies found in the serum.
Type A blood can receive blood from donors of type A and type O blood.
Type B blood can receive blood from donors of type B and type O blood.
Type AB blood can receive blood from donors of type A, type B, type AB, or type O blood.
I feel that you should do what you feel..meaning if you would like to donate alot of blood then I dont see who would turn you down,Just dont over do your self and donate to much to where you may end up needin some back..
Only type O blood can be donated to a person with type O blood because type O blood is the Universal Donor.
Blood type O negative can donate blood to any negative blood type there is. But the blood type O negative cannot receive blood from any blood type but itself.
Depending on if you are O+ or O- there are two answers. O+ can receive blood from either O+ or O- donors. If you are O- you can only receive blood from O- donors.
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
Yes. O- can donate to all blood types. O+ can only donate to other positive blood types, including AB+.
Blood type AB can only donate to another AB type. Blood type O+ can be given to anyone, but a blood type like A or B or AB can only be donated to a person who has the same exact blood type as the person who is donating their blood.
Because there are no antigens present on te blood cells and so the recipient cannot launch an immune response against it no matter what antibodies they express.
O+ blood types can donate blood to anyone. O- blood types (for females) have to get this shot when they are pregnant. (I don't wanna be a O- blood type girl anymmore...) :(
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
If you have type o negative then you are the universal donor and could donate to any other blood type. If you have o positive then you would be limited in what blood types you could donate to.
An individual with A- (A negative) blood can safely receive the following blood types during a transfusion:A-O-
O negative
No - a pos can not donate blood to a negative
Yes. O- can donate to all blood types. O+ can only donate to other positive blood types, including AB+.
The positive or negative in the blood types refer to the Rh factor, which is an antigen. Antigens trigger immune responses. Being positive or negative for the Rh factor will impact who you can receive a blood donation from, and who you can donate blood to.
any blood could be donated.
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.
Blood type AB can only donate to another AB type. Blood type O+ can be given to anyone, but a blood type like A or B or AB can only be donated to a person who has the same exact blood type as the person who is donating their blood.
Blood type O- is one of the rarest blood types, and are known as universal donors because those with blood type O can donate to nearly all red blood cells. People with this type can only receive blood from other O-negative people.
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.