Wow! those videos are reaaaallllyyyy helllpppfffulll ... thanks i'm gonna have a A&P test and i was really confused about Antigens and antibodies ... thanks !!! now i understod! ...
agglutination are antigens which are carried by the red blood cells and are labelled for the purpose of grouping A and B. this is however not mentioned in this video
@vcky73 It's in his book. I think he does that on purpose to at least give him the respect of buying his book and DVDs. He leaves off the final video needed to finish the lecture. Obviously he would've added Rh- and + as well as talked about blood types being universal doner or receiver.
after agglutination the clumps will be phagocytosed by white blood cells, causing haemolysis. Thats why they are called haemolytic reactions, because of the breaking up of the red cells
thanks for your explanations, they are sequentially easy to follow and makes it easy to understand. I am just wondering if there is another video that follows Blood Group and Transfusion iii.
If someone is Rh factor negative then they can not be AB positive, as the positive would mean they have the RH factor. They can not be both. genetically A, B and the RH factor are all autosomal dominant.
Whats the difference between agglutination and coagulation?
Zayin1993 3 months ago
IS THERE PART 4 FOR THIS ?!! I NEED TO UNDERSTAND BLOOD TRANSFUSION :(
87funno 4 months ago
is there not a part 4? the vid seemed to cut short at the end ?
lou21lou21 5 months ago
hi,the videos are benificial,informative,interesting & easy to understand the subject
nazim1997 11 months ago
Thank you for this great explanation!
zarriagapatty 11 months ago
Thanks so much i finally understand :D
givv107 11 months ago
Wow! those videos are reaaaallllyyyy helllpppfffulll ... thanks i'm gonna have a A&P test and i was really confused about Antigens and antibodies ... thanks !!! now i understod! ...
suyvairu 1 year ago
I need to sell some books, please get your classmates to buy a Physiology book and a Pathophysiology book from
campbellteaching.co.uk
thanks, John
Campbellteaching 1 year ago
@Campbellteaching thank you for all your videos they are very well structured and easy to understand.
machacoification 10 months ago
improve video quality
maa543211 1 year ago
Thanks..Simple and easy to understand..keep it up
nobushino 1 year ago
Hi! Do you have any plans to post an explanations for other blood groups (i.e. Lewis, Kell, Rh, etc.)???
Thanks for the videos you have posted. :)
hcarrel26 2 years ago
agglutination are antigens which are carried by the red blood cells and are labelled for the purpose of grouping A and B. this is however not mentioned in this video
shabzmaya 2 years ago
What university do you teach at ?
mehdan2 2 years ago
how come theres +a or negative a,or +b or negative b?can u explain that,,tnx
vcky73 2 years ago
@vcky73 It's in his book. I think he does that on purpose to at least give him the respect of buying his book and DVDs. He leaves off the final video needed to finish the lecture. Obviously he would've added Rh- and + as well as talked about blood types being universal doner or receiver.
BF1 5 months ago
very nice..easier to undrstnd
vcky73 2 years ago
You always save me lol, you are super!!
Thank you so much.
sofrito34 3 years ago
after agglutination the clumps will be phagocytosed by white blood cells, causing haemolysis. Thats why they are called haemolytic reactions, because of the breaking up of the red cells
Campbellteaching 3 years ago
thanks for your explanations, they are sequentially easy to follow and makes it easy to understand. I am just wondering if there is another video that follows Blood Group and Transfusion iii.
katalina125 3 years ago
hehehe he's so cute!
latinita1988 3 years ago 2
If someone is Rh factor negative then they can not be AB positive, as the positive would mean they have the RH factor. They can not be both. genetically A, B and the RH factor are all autosomal dominant.
John
Campbellteaching 3 years ago