Individuals consisting of individuals of group B, which are present in the blood, each person collecting blood A, explain in detail what will happen between the recipient's antibody and antigen, and state the effect.
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Before the 1900s, it was thought that all blood was the same, a misunderstanding that led to frequently fatal transfusions of animal blood into humans and hazardous transfusions of blood between people. Human blood is not the same—people belong to different blood groups, depending upon the surface markers found on the red blood cell.
The cells that make up the body's tissues and organs are covered with surface markers, or antigens. Red blood cells are no different. This chapter will describe the types of red blood cell antigen and explain why they are so important in medicine today.
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