the childs blood group will be either A, B or AB - the chances are equal. it will definately not be O.
however it will most probably be rhesus positive.
rhesus negative mothers will be advised to have injections of anti-d at birth & during pregnancy if there has been any chance of hers & the babys blood mixing - such as if any bleeding occoured or if there was trauma.
i hope this helps.
2006-08-30 06:15:30
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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As far as blood group is concerned, I would say that the child can be, well.. anything.
It depends if the parents are homozygous (Bb/Aa) or heterozygous (Bo/Ao). If they happen to be homozygous, it's most likely that the child will be AB, for they are codominant; if one of them is heterozygous an the other is not, then it's 50-50 he/she'll be AB/B or A. If both parents are heterozygous, then the it's 25% for A, B, AB or even O.
Regarding the RH factor: (+) is dominant over (-), so, if the father's heterozygous (+-) then the child has a 50% chance of being positive (+) and a 50% of being negative (-). If the father's homozygous (++) then he'll be positive for sure. Negative is ALWAYS a homozygous (--).
2006-08-30 05:58:53
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answer #2
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answered by alexarreolat 2
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I'm in the same situation. Nothing can happen to your baby because your blood will never meet the baby's blood. At about 26 weeks or so you will get a shot because you are RH negative. My mom was the same way with me and my syblings and we all came out just fine.
2006-08-30 05:53:12
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answer #3
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answered by Shannon 5
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properly that relies upon if mom and pa are AA/AO, or BB/BO respectively. If mom is AA dad is BB then 0% (all childrens would be AB) If mom is AO dad is BB then 50% (0.5 the youngsters would be AB and the rest would be BO) If mom is AO dad is BO then 25% (one each and each of AB, AO, BO, and OO) if mom is AA dad is BO then 0% (the two AB or AO) i assume the completed threat would then be 3/sixteen (there are 3 mixtures for B out of the 12 obtainable mixtures above) or 18.seventy 5%.
2016-12-17 19:46:44
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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rh factor. dont know what the blood type will be. a blood test at birth will tell you. the mother needs to tell her docotr about the different types and be put on meds to combat any problems
2006-08-30 05:48:43
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answer #5
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answered by kleighs mommy 7
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it could be either. There is also a possiblity of a problem with mother carrying baby to term is the baby's rh is different than the mothers (the +/- thing).
2006-08-30 05:48:04
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answer #6
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answered by MamaSunshine 4
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Me and my wife have the Rh factor, she is 0 neg. and I am 0 pos. we had two healthy boys we just celebrated the youngest one's 43 birthday
2006-08-31 20:40:15
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Baby could be anything with this combination (which is really AO, and BO). They could be O, A, B, or AB.
2006-08-30 06:00:42
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answer #8
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answered by Melissa 7
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'A', 'B', 'AB' or 'O'
positive and negative for all
http://www.paternityangel.com/Articles_zone/Blood/BloodType2.htm
2006-08-30 06:00:29
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answer #9
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answered by mememe 4
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i dont know any of this stuff
2006-08-30 05:50:27
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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