No.
A complete blood transfusion might alter a DNA test result if you left blood at the scene of the crime right afterwards but the body generates new blood cells very quickly.
If the DNA test was preformed with the standard cheek swab technique your DNA would show no difference at all.
-dh
2006-12-09 01:27:19
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answer #1
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answered by delicateharmony 5
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No, it doesn't replace your 'unique DNA' ... besides the very shown truth that it extremely is an quite 'good question' because it signifies that you're 'questioning' about 'each and each and every of the stuff DNA can let us know about ourselves' and are questioning if it ought to 'replace it' ... yet with out problem, 'blood', at the same time as it truly is a good situation to attempt for 'DNA' is only a 'common liquid' and the fairly 'minute' quantity you need to get from a 'blood transfusion' (about one pint ... even if you get more beneficial than one pint in the course of the transfusion, each and each and every separate pint probable comes from a special donor than any others) and your own DNA is in 'a lot extra' than only your blood. i visit't inform you WHY an quite short time after the transfusion all of your blood may have an identical DNA that you've been 'born with' ... yet i do not ignore that it does.
2016-11-25 00:46:07
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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NO, Dna will be in our every cell we are having, even the cells formed after transfusion dont get foreign Dna.
2006-12-09 02:24:05
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answer #3
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answered by grefriend 2
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No. Red blood cells have no nuclei, which contain DNA. The blood contains a small portion of white cells which do have DNA in them, but compared to the billions of cells in your body with your DNA in it....nothing would change
2006-12-09 01:27:40
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answer #4
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answered by missvictoria30 5
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ohh no... your DNA is a gift from your biological mother and biological father, and it's set in stone at birth.
Your DNA, after your development and birth, are essentially blue prints for the cell in your bodey to work with... things like what eye color to maintain, or, what blood type to produce, or, how tall you will grow... you can modify certain traits, such as taking growth hormones, or wear colored contacts, but your DNA stays the same throughout your life.
Unless you get covered in green ooze and you happen to be a turtle.
2006-12-09 01:27:45
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answer #5
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answered by antsam999 4
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Yes. You may run the risk of becoming a large black man if you are a small white girl, you could become an old asian grandmother, almost instantly. Transfusions are no laughing matter! They are medicine's modern killer.
2006-12-09 01:27:14
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answer #6
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answered by osakasuki92 2
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no, because blood only contains the blood cells and not the genes
2006-12-09 01:32:31
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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no, but the blood cells you actually get will eventually die as you continue to produce new ones.
2006-12-09 01:47:52
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answer #8
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answered by whiteafrican01 3
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