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  2. Blood type distribution by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type_distribution_by...

    Blood group B has its highest frequency in the Middle East, where it ranks as the largest share of the population. In Southeast Asia its share of the population is lowest, especially in Indonesia, secondarily in East Asia , Northern Asia and neighboring Central Asia , and its incidence diminishes both towards the east and the west , falling to ...

  3. Blood type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type

    A complete blood type would describe each of the 45 blood groups, and an individual's blood type is one of many possible combinations of blood-group antigens. [3] Almost always, an individual has the same blood group for life, but very rarely an individual's blood type changes through addition or suppression of an antigen in infection, malignancy, or autoimmune disease.

  4. ABO blood group system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABO_blood_group_system

    He defined that group A blood agglutinates with group B, but never with its own type. Similarly, group B blood agglutinates with group A. Group C blood is different in that it agglutinates with both A and B. [9] This was the discovery of blood groups for which Landsteiner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1930.

  5. Lutheran antigen system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutheran_antigen_system

    The antigens Aua and Aub, known as the Auberger antigens, were once thought to make up a separate blood group but were later shown to be Lutheran antigens arising from variations in the BCAM gene. The phenotypes Lu(a+b−) and Lu(a+b+) are found at various frequencies within populations. The Lu(a−b+) phenotype is the most common in all ...

  6. Human blood group systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_blood_group_systems

    The term human blood group systems is defined by the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT) as systems in the human species where cell-surface antigens—in particular, those on blood cells—are "controlled at a single gene locus or by two or more very closely linked homologous genes with little or no observable recombination between them", [1] and include the common ABO and Rh ...

  7. Beta thalassemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_thalassemia

    The mean patient age is 23, with only 1% of consultants being older than 75, and 69% being 15–59. It is estimated that 1.5% of the world's population are carriers and 40,000 affected infants are born with the disease annually. [19] Beta thalassemia major is usually fatal in infancy if blood transfusions are not initiated immediately. [76]

  8. Blood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood

    The blood was considered to have the power of its originator, and, after the butchering, the blood was sprinkled on the walls, on the statues of the gods, and on the participants themselves. This act of sprinkling blood was called blóedsian in Old English, and the terminology was borrowed by the Roman Catholic Church becoming to bless and ...

  9. H antigen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H_antigen

    H antigen can refer to one of the various types of antigens having diverse biological functions: . Also known as substance H, H antigen is a precursor to each of the ABO blood group antigens, apparently present in all people except those with the Bombay Blood phenotype [1] (see hh blood group).