A1 is a subgroup of A group which contains a lower amount of A antigen than A group and represents 80% of group A donors.
Yes I am A2B positive. Blood tests are free if you want to give blood.
Very egoistic, reserve, shy, inactive, quiet, dormant, miser
A1 is a subgroup of A group which contains a lower amount of A antigen than A group and represents 80% of group A donors.
Yes, there is
both are same
different antibodies
There are four types of blood. They are type A, type B, type AB and type O. There are also differences between whether they are positive or negative. That relates to the RH factor.
No, type B blood does not have A antigens. Type B blood has B antigens.
blood type A has type A antigens. blood type B has type B antigens.
No - blood type B cannot donate to blood type O. This is because blood type B contains B antigens, and blood type O contains Anti-B antibodies. However, blood type O can donate to blood type B.
blood type B
If the recipient has type B blood, they can receive either type B or type O blood. If the donor blood is type B, then the recipient can be either type B or type AB
A,ab or b
The short answer is that the Type B patient has antigens for that specific blood type, so when type A is mixed with the type B, the antibodies in the B blood kill the A blood cells, making it useless.
Yes, the child's blood type can be B if the father has o.
blood type b
There is a book by Peter D'Adamo that outlines special diets by blood type. There are differences in diet, for example, people with type O blood should not eat much dairy, but people with type B blood should eat dairy.
For a transfusion - blood type O can donate to blood type B. However, blood type O cannot except B-type blood. For offspring, with one O parent and one B parent - the child could be blood type O or B depending on the genotype of the parent with B-type blood.