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BIO 140 Human Biology I - Questions and Solutions

Blood Typing - Solutions

Review Questions

1. The process in which antibodies attach to antigens, causing the formation of masses of linked cells, is called ________.

  1. sensitization
  2. coagulation
  3. agglutination
  4. hemolysis

2. People with ABO blood type O ________.

  1. have both antigens A and B on their erythrocytes
  2. lack both antigens A and B on their erythrocytes
  3. have neither anti-A nor anti-B antibodies circulating in their blood plasma
  4. are considered universal recipients

3. Hemolytic disease of the newborn is a risk during a subsequent pregnancy in which ________.

  1. a type AB mother is carrying a type O fetus
  2. a type O mother is carrying a type AB fetus
  3. an Rh+ mother is carrying an Rh fetus
  4. an Rh mother is carrying a second Rh+ fetus

 

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Critical Thinking Questions

1. Following a motor vehicle accident, a patient is rushed to the emergency department with multiple traumatic injuries, causing severe bleeding. The patient’s condition is critical, and there is no time for determining his blood type. What type of blood is transfused, and why?

Solution: In emergency situations, blood type O will be infused until cross matching can be done. Blood type O is called the universal donor blood because the erythrocytes have neither A nor B antigens on their surface, and the Rh factor is negative.

2. In preparation for a scheduled surgery, a patient visits the hospital lab for a blood draw. The technician collects a blood sample and performs a test to determine its type. She places a sample of the patient’s blood in two wells. To the first well she adds anti-A antibody. To the second she adds anti-B antibody. Both samples visibly agglutinate. Has the technician made an error, or is this a normal response? If normal, what blood type does this indicate?

Solution: The lab technician has not made an error. Blood type AB has both A and B surface antigens, and neither anti-A nor anti-B antibodies circulating in the plasma. When anti-A antibodies (added to the first well) contact A antigens on AB erythrocytes, they will cause agglutination. Similarly, when anti-B antibodies contact B antigens on AB erythrocytes, they will cause agglutination.

 

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OpenStax, Blood Typing. OpenStax CNX. Nov 7, 2014 http://cnx.org/contents/9da7a518-da0d-4e20-98e2-cf76482fc6f0@6. © Nov 7, 2014 OpenStax. Textbook content produced by OpenStax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 license.