Common questions

Is it possible that child blood group be different from parents?

Is it possible that child blood group be different from parents?

Yes, a child is able to have a different blood type than both parents. Which parent decides the blood type of the child? The child’s blood type is decided by both parents’ blood type. Parents all pass along one of their 2 alleles to make up their child’s blood type.

Can a child have a different DNA from the father?

First, a child might inherit two copies of a rare, recessive mutation from one parent. Second, some genes are normally turned off or on depending on which parent they’re inherited from in a phenomenon called “genomic imprinting.” That means inheriting two copies from the same parent can cause various health issues.

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Does a child always have the same blood type as their mother?

The ABCs of ABO Incompatibility The reason a baby’s blood type isn’t always the same as his mother is that blood type is based on genes from each parent. So, for example, a mother who is type O and a father who is type A could have a child who is type A.

Does the child always have the father’s blood type?

Just like eye or hair color, our blood type is inherited from our parents. Each biological parent donates one of two ABO genes to their child. The A and B genes are dominant and the O gene is recessive. For example, if an O gene is paired with an A gene, the blood type will be A.

What if your baby has a different blood type?

If a baby’s and mother’s blood are incompatible, it can lead to fetal anemia, immune hydrops (erythroblastosis fetalis) and other complications. The most common type of blood type incompatibility is Rh disease (also known as Rh incompatibility). The Rh factor is a protein on the covering of red blood cells.

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Can a child look exactly like one parent?

Looking more like one parent or the other is dependent on the gene versions each parent has. And which ones happen to get passed down. We have two copies of each of our chromosomes and so have two copies of each of our genes.