A patient comes in and has only A-antigens on the surface of their erythrocyte, what is their blood type? Question 4 options: B- O+ AB+ A- A+ B+ O- AB-
Added by Noelia H.
Step 1
** Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Sri K and 69 other Biology educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
A patient was seen in the emergency room, and a crossmatch was ordered. The ABO forward and reverse grouping results are as follows: anti-A: negative anti-B: negative anti-A,B: 1+ A1 cells: 1+ B cells: 4+ 1. Are these test results consistent? Why/why not? 2. What steps should be taken to resolve any existing discrepancies? 3. What blood group should be transfused to the patient?
Sri K.
Experiment Results Predict Question: If the patient's blood type is AB-, what would be the appearance of the A, B, and Rh samples? Your answer: a. A, clumped; B, unclumped; Rh, clumped Stop & Think Questions: Why are individuals with the AB+ blood type known as universal recipients for blood transfusions? You correctly answered: c. They have both A and B antigens on the surface of their RBCs, and their blood serum does not contain antibodies against A, B, or Rh antigens. Experiment Data: Blood sample Agglutination with Anti-A Serum Agglutination with Anti-B Serum Agglutination with Anti-Rh Serum Blood Type 1 positive negative positive A+ 2 negative positive positive B+ 3 positive positive negative AB- 4 negative negative negative O- 5 positive positive positive AB+ 6 negative positive negative B- Give the conclusion on blood typing assay:
Madhur L.
Blood Laboratory Report 1. Name the cell-surface antigens present and absent on a red blood cell if a patient is: a. Type A- b. Type O+ c. Type AB- 2. The universal donor is blood type and why is this so? 3. The rarest blood type is type: 4. Describe the condition that must have arisen in a situation where a child develops erythroblastosis fetalis. 5. How may this condition be prevented? 6. Can blood types be used in paternity cases to prove or disprove possible fatherhood? Give examples to support your answers 7. Suppose a patient who is the universal donor received blood from the universal recipient. Will that patient be safe? Why or why not? Explain your answer in detail.
Hem S.
Recommended Textbooks
Biology for AP Courses
Objective Biology for NEET
Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry
Transcript
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD