00:01
In this question, could jane's blood cells be used for this transfusion? the answer is yes.
00:09
Jane's blood can be used for transfusion to the victim having ab plus vc group.
00:23
Why? because blood type is determined by the antigen it contains.
00:32
And there are two major type of blood antigens.
00:36
So there are two types of blood antigen that is abo and rh, which combine to create blood types.
00:56
A patient can receive blood that has the same abo antigen as theirs plus type o.
01:05
Rh plus can receive rht and rh minus, while rh minus must receive, so it must receive rh minus blood.
01:23
Here, jane's blood is a -b -b -plus v -e, rather.
01:30
This means that there is antigen a and antigen b.
01:35
There is no antibodies.
01:38
This blood can be given to a patient with ab group.
01:43
So the answer is yes.
01:44
Jane can use for, or jane's blood can be used for transfusion for the victim.
01:52
Next question is that mike is a blood type a.
01:58
This is question for number seven.
02:01
When a lab technician mixes a sample of mike's blood with serum, taken from ken's blood, mike's blood cells agglutinate.
02:13
When mike's blood is mixed with serum from kim's blood, there's no agglotination.
02:19
What is the most likely explanation of this? simply because mike's blood agglutinate with ken's blood, it means that ken's blood group is either blood type b or ab group.
02:39
When mike's blood group mixed with kim's blood, there was no agglutination, which means kim's blood.
02:50
So kim's blood is either blood type a or blood type o group...