Yes, a person with blood type O+ can receive blood from a donor with blood type B+. However, they can only donate blood to someone with the same blood type.
Blood type O can safely receive transfusions of type O blood, as it does not have A or B antigens that could trigger an immune response. It is often referred to as the universal blood donor because it can be given to individuals with other blood types.
Your mother would have to be type O negative for you to have a blood type of O positive. This is because the O blood type is recessive, so both parents would need to pass on the O gene for their child to have type O blood.
If you and your son both have O positive blood types, it is impossible for the baby's father to have AB blood type. The child would inherit an O blood type from you.
The rhesus factor (positive and negative) isn't important so...The A (and B) blood type genes are dominant over O (which actually just means the lack of A/B). Since mum and dad are both blood type O neither mum or dad have the A gene which means the baby cannot be type A. A different dad (or mum) with blood type A or AB would be needed.
No. Persons with type O blood can only receive type O blood.
Yes, a person with blood type O+ can receive blood from a donor with blood type B+. However, they can only donate blood to someone with the same blood type.
No, a person with blood type O can only receive blood from a person who also has O. But in tissue typing that is done for organs, it is much more complicated and the HLA major and minors are checked for compatibility.
A neg and 0
Yes, and this person can also receive blood from blood group type A and 0. If there are complications it is probably due the an other type of blood group, the rhesus blood group.
Blood type O can safely receive transfusions of type O blood, as it does not have A or B antigens that could trigger an immune response. It is often referred to as the universal blood donor because it can be given to individuals with other blood types.
People with O+ blood can receive either O+ or 0- blood, but an organ match requires more than just the right blood type.
Yes, a baby can have problems no matter what blood type.
in depends. What gene in dominate?
FALSE B CAN ONLY RECEIVEVE O AND B SAFELY BECAUSE OF THAT A IN AB, THEMPERSON CAN'T RECEIVE IT
Your mother would have to be type O negative for you to have a blood type of O positive. This is because the O blood type is recessive, so both parents would need to pass on the O gene for their child to have type O blood.
Type O or type A broadly speaking. it also depends on other proteins found on the surface of donated blood cells such as rhesus proteins. someone can be rhesus plus or rhesus minus meaning they either have the protein or don't. You can only receive blood of the same rhesus type of as your own for example: A rhesus positive can only receive A rhesus positive or O rhesus positive