I say this with kindness, as someone that wants you to be a strong independent student: If you are going to ask me for donate to/receive from for a specific blood type, please include what you think the correct answer is because if you aren't trying, you aren't learning (and go back to 9:13 and remind yourself of the rules)
I was wondering about the antibodies a donor makes to a recipient. Thank you so much for the answer I have been looking for!!!! You are my Anatomy Hero!!❤❤
Glad I could help! All the credit is really owed to the dozens and dozens of students at my school that come to see me for walk-in tutoring...having all those one on one conversations every semester helps me realize where the gaps in my explanations are!
Praise be to God who guided me to this channel. Thank you. May God guide you to Islam. Search for Islam ☪️ and you will find what impresses you, whether in medicine or anything else. Once again, thank you.
I'm not sure what you're referring to...I don't think there's any point in the video that I said B+ can donate to AB- and B- In the video I show that B+ can only give blood (donate to) B+ and AB+ In the video I also show that B+ can take blood (receive from) o-, o+, B- and b+ Lets me know if you have any more questions, and if there's a specific part of the video that confused you please leave a timestamp
Whoops! I see it now. There was a point earlier in the video where I said it correctly but then I made a typo on the last slide... The correct answer is as I stated in my original comment. Good job catching my mistake and thanks for bringing it to my attention. I'll see if I can blur it out so I don't confuse anyone further!
Honestly I don't know. Giving A+ to A- should result in a pretty serious transfusion reaction. In the case that they didn't die, I would assume that all the A antigen would be cleared from the person's system pretty quickly, so I think there's either something I don't know about or the question was written wrong.
I say this with kindness, as someone that wants you to be a strong independent student: If you are going to ask me for donate to/receive from for a specific blood type, please include what you think the correct answer is because if you aren't trying, you aren't learning (and go back to 9:13 and remind yourself of the rules)
I am preparing for my upcoming medical school exams, and your videos have been so helpful. I can't thank you enough!! You are a fantastic professor.
Happy to help! Good luck in your studies!
I was wondering about the antibodies a donor makes to a recipient. Thank you so much for the answer I have been looking for!!!! You are my Anatomy Hero!!❤❤
Glad I could help! All the credit is really owed to the dozens and dozens of students at my school that come to see me for walk-in tutoring...having all those one on one conversations every semester helps me realize where the gaps in my explanations are!
Praise be to God who guided me to this channel. Thank you. May God guide you to Islam. Search for Islam ☪️ and you will find what impresses you, whether in medicine or anything else. Once again, thank you.
B+ CAN ONLY DONATE TO AB+/B+.PLZ EXPLAIN HOW IT IS DONATING TO B NEGATIVE AND AB NEGATIVE
I'm not sure what you're referring to...I don't think there's any point in the video that I said B+ can donate to AB- and B-
In the video I show that B+ can only give blood (donate to) B+ and AB+
In the video I also show that B+ can take blood (receive from) o-, o+, B- and b+
Lets me know if you have any more questions, and if there's a specific part of the video that confused you please leave a timestamp
19:06
Whoops! I see it now. There was a point earlier in the video where I said it correctly but then I made a typo on the last slide...
The correct answer is as I stated in my original comment. Good job catching my mistake and thanks for bringing it to my attention. I'll see if I can blur it out so I don't confuse anyone further!
A - group received A+blood, after few months test blood group is A+results it's possible what 😅pls help me
Honestly I don't know. Giving A+ to A- should result in a pretty serious transfusion reaction. In the case that they didn't die, I would assume that all the A antigen would be cleared from the person's system pretty quickly, so I think there's either something I don't know about or the question was written wrong.