Blood Groups
What makes a person's blood group A or B? What is the meaning of rhesus positive and negative? What makes two different bloods from two different persons compatible (match) or incompatible (do not match)?
The system of A’s and B’s is called the ABO or the Landsteiner blood grouping system. The body, which is continuously being bombarded by bacteria, viruses and foreign substances, has a complicated defense mechanism. One way of protecting itself is through internal substances formed in the blood, to destroy any foreign substances that enter the blood stream. The substances formed by the body in the blood are called antibodies (agglutinins) and the foreign substances are called antigens. For example, pollen from flowers, micro-organisms such as bacteria and viruses, proteins molecules from animals, foreign tissues like transplanted organs and blood transfusions, and penicillin are examples of foreign antigens. However antigens can be also internal (intrinsic). These internal antigens are the personal characteristics of a person or a group of persons, and we are born with these internal antigens. On the surface of a red blood cell (the erythrocyte) there are many layers of substances among which are the (internal) antigens. There are two important antigens, which are called the A antigen, and B antigen. If on the surface of the red blood cells there is the A antigen, the blood group is A; if there is the B antigen, the blood group is B; if there are both A and B antigens, the blood group is AB. If there is neither the A nor the B antigen on the red blood cell, the blood group is O. It is these antigens that are responsible whether a blood is A, B, AB or O. Blood with the A antigen on the red cells has B antibodies in the plasma. Blood with the B antigen on the red blood cell has A antibodies in the plasma. Blood with A and B antigen on the red cell has no A or B antibodies in the plasma. Blood with no A and B antigens on the red blood cell has A and B antibodies in the plasma. This means that a blood type has the opposite antibody in the plasma. This concept is not very easy to understand and quite difficult to explain. Keep the following in mind, if A antigens meets A antibodies, A antibodies destroy A antigens. On the same principle, if B antigens meet B antibodies , B antibodies destroy B antigens . This would cause the red blood cells that are being attacked to clog together and of course block the veins and arteries of the patient.
Follow carefully these examples: Legend: Patient or recipient is red and donor is blue.
Rule of thumb: When there is a reaction (i.e. bloods that do not match) the patient plasma antibodies attack the antigen on the red blood cell of the donor. The antigen on the donor's red blood cells are foreign antigens to the patient (recipient). |