The Student Room Group

Reply 1

If you give blood, it should be on your card

Reply 2

This is from the National Blood Service page and should help you explain all.

The ABO System

If you have blood group A then you've got A antigens covering your red cells.

Blood group B means you have B antigens, while group O has neither, and group AB has some of both.

The ABO system also contains lots of little antibodies in the plasma, antibodies being the body's natural defence against foreign antigens.

So blood group A has anti-B in their plasma, blood group B has anti-A (you probably get the picture at this stage).

To complicate matters though, group AB has none and group O has both of the antibodies.

Which means giving someone blood from the wrong ABO group could be fatal.

The anti-A antibodies in group B attack group A cells and vice versa.

Which is why group A blood must never be given to a group B person.

Group O negative is a different story.

The Rh system

Still with us?

Well, it gets more complicated here on in, because there's another antigen to be considered - the Rh antigen.

Some of us have it, some of us don't.

If it is present, the blood is RhD positive, if not it's RhD negative.

So, for example, some people in group A will have it, and will therefore be classed as A+ (or A positive).

While the ones that don't, are A- (or, wait for it...A negative).

And so it goes for groups B, AB and O.

This effectively doubles the number of different blood types to be matched, because you shouldn't mix blood type A+ with blood type A-.

84% of the population is Rh positive.

(And yes, that means the other 16% of the population is running around with Rh negative blood.)

Reply 3

lessthanthree
Check me out, I'm A- (:

[my dad's O-neg and my mum's A-pos]


why would you want to know? Giving blood is like helping Micheal Howard's campaign.

MB

Reply 4

musicboy
why would you want to know? Giving blood is like helping Micheal Howard's campaign.

MB


giving blood is like saving lives. and it's interesting to know what's inside of you

Reply 5

I'm o positive after all I'm the black sheep of the family my mom and brother are both A positive and I think the others are the same so i'm the only one with an O blood type thank god my father is an O too:eek:

Reply 6

musicboy
why would you want to know? Giving blood is like helping Micheal Howard's campaign.

MB


Doesn't he take it from you?

Reply 7

mum is A-, dad is A+, i'm A+....

Reply 8

Theres a blood group finder on the main website if you put in you mum and dads bloodgroups it tells you what you could be
my mum is a pos and so is dad.
I could have been A+ A - O+ or O-
but I'm A+

Reply 9

AB+ :biggrin:

Reply 10

viviki
Theres a blood group finder on the main website if you put in you mum and dads bloodgroups it tells you what you could be
my mum is a pos and so is dad.
I could have been A+ A - O+ or O-
but I'm A+
I could've been A, B, or O as my dad's AB+ and my mum's O+ :smile: But instead I'm AB+ :biggrin: My sister's O+ though. I think :confused:

Reply 11

danni_bella83
But instead I'm AB+ :biggrin:


And me......only 1 in 50 people are AB+!

Reply 12

I'm AB+ as well hehe!

My mum is B-, my brother is A- and my sister is AB- so i guess my dad is AB+ or something like that

Reply 13

I have no idea what blood groups my parents are in, but I'm A+, yay :biggrin:

Reply 14

Cant remember but its an odd one.

Im not allowed to donate blood because i have that thing were when you bleed you cant stop. (sounds like a pringles advert)

Reply 15

danni_bella83
I could've been A, B, or O as my dad's AB+ and my mum's O+ :smile: But instead I'm AB+ :biggrin: My sister's O+ though. I think :confused:

lol i dont think ur sister CAN be O+ because she would have had to get one or the other from your father and O is recessive

Reply 16

Yeah_butno
Cant remember but its an odd one.

Im not allowed to donate blood because i have that thing were when you bleed you cant stop. (sounds like a pringles advert)

ur a hemophiliac i think

Reply 17

Haha, when my dad was at uni him and his friends went on holiday to Crete, and discovered (typical students!) that they didn't have enough cash to get back to Hull (where they were at uni), so they donated blood. It appears that you get paid to give blood in Greece. Anyway, all my dad's mates got annoyed because they all had really common blood types and my dad is AB- I think, which is rare so he got loads of money and they got hardly any! Score!