Physiology

🧬 Blood Groups and Transfusion Reactions

The Science of Compatibility

Blood and Body Fluids

Imagine blood as a social network — every red cell carries "badges" on its surface. These badges are antigens, and your immune system decides which badges are self and which are foreign. If you receive blood carrying unfamiliar badges, your immune army attacks — and that's how transfusion reactions happen.

🩸 What Are Blood Groups?

Blood groups are classifications of blood based on antigens present on the surface of red blood cells (RBCs). These antigens are inherited and determine how your immune system reacts to transfused blood.

ABO System

Based on A and B antigens

A B

Rh System

Based on D antigen

Rh+ Rh-

🧩 The ABO Blood Group System

Discovered by Karl Landsteiner in 1900 — one of medicine's most revolutionary findings.

🅰️ Type A

Antigens & Antibodies

A antigen on RBCs

Anti-B in plasma

Compatibility

Receive from: A, O

Donate to: A, AB

🅱️ Type B

Antigens & Antibodies

B antigen on RBCs

Anti-A in plasma

Compatibility

Receive from: B, O

Donate to: B, AB

🆎 Type AB - The Universal Recipient

Antigens & Antibodies

A + B antigens

No antibodies in plasma

Compatibility

Receive from: A, B, AB, O

Donate to: AB only

🅾️ Type O - The Universal Donor

Antigens & Antibodies

No antigens on RBCs

Anti-A + Anti-B in plasma

Compatibility

Receive from: O only

Donate to: Everyone

Mnemonic: "AB = receiver" (no antibodies), "O = donor" (no antigens)
High-yield point: The antibodies in the ABO system are naturally occurring IgM antibodies — they appear in early infancy without prior exposure.

🔄 How ABO Compatibility Works

If you transfuse incompatible blood, antibodies in the recipient plasma bind to donor RBC antigens → cause agglutination and hemolysis.

Example: Type A person + Type B blood
Anti-B antibodies attack → transfusion reaction
RBC destruction → hemoglobin release → kidney damage → shock

🧬 The Rh (Rhesus) Blood Group System

The Rh system (discovered in Rhesus monkeys) is based mainly on the D antigen.

Rh Positive (Rh⁺)

D antigen present
Example: A⁺, B⁺, AB⁺, O⁺

Rh Negative (Rh⁻)

D antigen absent
Example: A⁻, B⁻, AB⁻, O⁻
Key Difference: Unlike ABO system, Rh antibodies (anti-D) are not naturally present — they form only after exposure (transfusion or pregnancy).

👶 Erythroblastosis Fetalis (Hemolytic Disease of the Newborn)

One of the most classic and clinically important conditions related to the Rh system.

Step 1: Sensitization

Rh⁻ mother carries Rh⁺ fetus → fetal RBCs enter maternal circulation during delivery

Step 2: Antibody Production

Mother produces anti-D antibodies

Step 3: Next Pregnancy

Anti-D antibodies cross placenta → destroy fetal RBCs

Consequences: Fetal anemia, jaundice, hydrops fetalis, or death
Prevention: Administer Rho(D) immune globulin (RhoGAM) to Rh⁻ mothers within 72 hours of delivery. It destroys fetal Rh⁺ cells before mother's immune system reacts.

🧫 Cross-Matching and Blood Transfusion

Before any transfusion, cross-matching is performed to ensure compatibility.

Step 1: Blood Grouping
Identify ABO and Rh type
Step 2: Cross-Match
Mix donor RBCs with recipient plasma → check for agglutination
Step 3: Transfusion
Only proceed if compatible

⚠️ Transfusion Reactions - When Blood Fights Back

1. Acute Hemolytic Reaction (Most Severe)

Cause: ABO incompatibility (e.g., O → A)

Mechanism: IgM antibodies cause complement-mediated hemolysis

Symptoms: Fever, chills, chest/flank pain, hypotension, hemoglobinuria → acute renal failure

Emergency tip: Stop transfusion immediately, maintain urine flow (IV fluids + diuretics)

2. Febrile Non-Hemolytic Reaction

Cause: Recipient antibodies reacting with donor WBCs or cytokines

Symptoms: Fever, chills (without hemolysis)

Management: Antipyretics

3. Allergic Reaction

Cause: Plasma proteins in donor blood trigger histamine release

Symptoms: Itching, urticaria (hives)

Treatment: Antihistamines; if severe → epinephrine

4. Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury (TRALI)

Cause: Donor anti-leukocyte antibodies

Symptoms: Acute pulmonary edema within 6 hours

Management: Supportive care, oxygen

Safety Note: Modern transfusion protocols include careful donor screening, cross-matching, and leukoreduction to minimize risks.

🔬 Universal Donors and Recipients

Type RBC Donation Plasma Donation
O⁻ Universal RBC donor Can only receive O⁻
AB⁺ Universal RBC recipient Universal plasma donor
Why O⁻ is universal donor: No A, B, or Rh antigens → no immune attack from recipient antibodies.

🧠 High-Yield Clinical Summary

System Key Antigens Antibodies Clinical Importance
ABO A, B Naturally occurring IgM Major transfusion reactions
Rh D antigen IgG (after exposure) Erythroblastosis fetalis
Cross-match Compatibility check --- Prevents transfusion errors

🎯 Key Takeaways

  • Blood groups are determined by antigens on RBC surfaces
  • ABO system has naturally occurring IgM antibodies
  • Rh system antibodies develop only after exposure
  • O⁻ is universal donor; AB⁺ is universal recipient
  • Cross-matching prevents transfusion reactions
  • Acute hemolytic reaction is the most severe transfusion complication
  • RhoGAM prevents erythroblastosis fetalis in Rh⁻ mothers

🌟 The Miracle of Compatibility

The science of blood groups represents one of medicine's greatest discoveries, turning life-threatening transfusions into routine, safe procedures. Understanding these molecular "badges" on red blood cells has saved countless lives and continues to be fundamental to modern medicine.

Every time a transfusion is successfully performed, it's a testament to our understanding of immunology and the delicate balance of compatibility that keeps us alive.

Molecular Recognition: Your immune system's ability to distinguish "self" from "non-self" makes blood transfusion both possible and potentially dangerous — a delicate balance mastered through scientific understanding.

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