Biology, asked by anushkaroy0321, 20 days ago

Suppose, a injured group injured person who have blood "A+ can take the blood from 'B+ blood group ? why?​

Answers

Answered by aditi1745
6

Answer:

That means people with type A blood create antibodies against B antigens. A person with type A blood receiving a transfusion of type B or AB blood would have an ABO incompatibility reaction. In an ABO incompatibility reaction, your immune system attacks the new blood cells and destroys them.

Answered by IINiRII
2

Explanation:

The ABO blood system has four main types:

  • Type A: This blood type has a marker known as A.
  • Type B: This blood type has a marker known as B.
  • Type AB: This blood type has both A and B markers.
  • Type O: This blood type has neither A or B markers.

To donate blood it is necessary to follow the rules of blood typing:

Blood O+ can donate to A+, B+, AB+ and O+

Blood O- can donate to A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-, O+ and O-

Blood A+ can donate to A+ and AB+

Blood A- can donate to A+, A-, AB+ and AB-

Blood B+ can donate to B+ and AB+

Blood B- can donate to B+, B-, AB+ and AB-

Blood AB+ can donate to AB+

Blood AB- can donate to AB+ and AB-

For easy understanding you can have a look at Attachment.

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Suppose, a injured group injured person who have blood "A+ can take the blood from 'B+ blood group ? why?

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No, A+ cannot receive B+ blood group according to the above information.

HØPÊ ÎT HÈLPẞ YØÜ ☃️☄️...

Attachments:
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