A person whose red blood cells agglutinate with anti-B antibodies BUT NOT anti-A antibodies is type AB.
<h3>What is an agglutinate?</h3>
Agglutination is the process by which specific antibodies to antigenic components on the surface of red blood cells or inert particles (direct agglutination) or to antigenic components adsorbed or chemically attached to red blood cells or inert particles produce clumps of cells or inert particles (passive hemagglutination and passive agglutination, respectively).
When antibodies on one RBC attach to the antigen on another RBC, a process known as agglutination, globular to amorphous, grape-like aggregates of RBCs are formed. RBC agglutination supports immune-mediated hemolytic anemia when it is present (IMHA). The majority of IMHA instances do not exhibit agglutination, but when it does, immunoglobulin M (IgM) is the most frequently implicated because of its pentavalent nature. Agglutination, however, might be brought on by a very thick IgG antibody coating of the RBC membranes. Agglutination is typically regarded as IMHA's diagnostic sign.
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Nope it is not look it up on the Internet
Reactions involving fire are typically characterized as combustion reactions in which a material is oxidized, producing carbon dioxide, water, and carbon monoxide in some incomplete combustion reactions.
Diffusion is the movement of substances from high to low concentration
osmosis is the diffusion of water through a semipermeable membrane from high to low water concentration