Definition of Blood group
Blood group: An inherited feature on the surface of
the red blood cells. A series of related blood types constitute a
blood group system such as the Rh or the ABO system.
The frequencies of the ABO and Rh blood types vary from population to population. In the US, the most common type is O+ (meaning O in the ABO system and positive in the Rh system) which is present in 37.4% of the population. The frequencies in the US (in descending order) are O+ (37.4%), A+ (35.7%), B+ (8.5%), O- (6.6%), A- (6.3%), AB+ (3.4%), B- (1.5%) and AB- (0.6%).
In 1901 a Viennese pathologist named Karl Landsteiner (1868-1943)
published an article entitled "On Agglutination Phenomena of Normal
Human Blood," in which he observed that, when blood was transfused
from one human to another, the body often clumped the transfused
blood cells and rejected the transfusion, sometimes going in shock.
In 1909 Landsteiner classified red blood cells into types A, B, AB
and O and showed that the body rejects transfusions of a different
blood type. After moving to the Rockefeller Institute in New York,
Landsteiner received the Nobel Prize in 1930 for his pioneering
research in immunology and blood grouping.
Common Misspellings: blod group
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