O
A
B
AB
AS
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Discussions (12)

Person(s) with blood group "O", lacks antigen "A" &/or "B" on the surface of their Red cells, with the presence of corresponding antibodies A & B; as a result of that, they can't accept blood transfusion from A,B or AB person (only O group). Thus, they're NOT universal RECIPIENTS, rather they are universal DONOR.
Conversely, person(s) with blood group AB, has both Antigen A & B on the surface of their red cells, with the absence of both antibodies A & B; as a result of that, they can accept blood transfusion from A, B, AB, & O. Thus, they're universal RECIPIENTS, instead of universal DONOR.
At this juncture, D is the correct answer.
Thanks.

The correct answer is D, because AB is the universal recipent while O is the universal donor.

The selected answer is wrong:
A group O individual can only receive blood from a group O individual,but can donate blood to individuals of any ABO group ..they are the universal donors while an AB individual can receive blood from any other but can't donate to any group other than AB for this they are known as universal recipients
REF: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type



