asked 148k views
2 votes
when testing for blood type, if the blood agglutinates in antiserum containing anti-A antibodies, but no in antiserum containing anti-B antibodies, what is the blood type?

asked
User JSRB
by
8.3k points

2 Answers

3 votes
Blood grouping is an antigen-antibody reaction, antigens on the red cells reaction with antibodies in the serum or monoclonal antibodies and vice versa, therefore, people with blood group A have antigen A on their red cells have corresponding Antibody B in their serum whiles those with blood group B have Antigen B on their red cells have corresponding Antibody A in their serum.
Therefore only people with antigen B on their red cells will be able to agglutinate antibody A, the blood group of the person is BLOOD GROUP A.
answered
User Meytal
by
7.7k points
4 votes

bloud group A

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answered
User Serdar Ozler
by
8.1k points
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