A person with type O blood can donate to a patient with type A because the donor's blood

a

lacks antigens

b

lacks anti-A antibodies

c

lacks anti-B antibodies

d

has both anti-A and anti-B antibodies

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Correct Option
a

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Discussions (2)

Gerald4585
10 years ago

The answer to this question is A,agglutination occurs when two contrasting antigens and antibodies meet,for instance a man with blood group A cannot accept blood from someone with blood group B because the person of blood group A has antibody A and person with blood group B has antigen B and as such agglutination will occur but it's been found that people with blood group O lack antigens in their blood and are therefore universal donors while people with blood group AB are universal recipient because they have both antigen A and antigen B in their blood.

Myschool Blessing
10 years ago

Thanks for your contribution. Corrections have been made.

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