Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
???????????????
???????????????
No one can change their blood type by transfusion. Even if you were AB and replaced your blood with another type, what your bone marrow produces is what blood type you have. Bone marrow transplants are the only cases of blood type changing. Unless there is something about chimeras that I don't know.A person with type O negative blood can't change their blood type by transfusion. At least, not if they want to live. AB positive people are laughing.
I can change my hair color. I've been slowly making grey for a number of years now.
I actually didn't know that, so I learned something today.
However, I said "type," not "color," so I'm still not wrong.
Besides, how do you know I'm not a horseshoe crab?
No one can change their blood type by transfusion. Even if you were AB and replaced your blood with another type, what your bone marrow produces is what blood type you have. Bone marrow transplants are the only cases of blood type changing. Unless there is something about chimeras that I don't know.
Or a lobster. Don't they have green blood?
Right away. There isn't a cycle that every 28 days you trade in your old blood. It's a constant turnover.I'm aware of that: I'm not talking about a permanent change there, skeptigirl. And most transfusions aren't complete replacements. But for those that are, you'd have a body full of the "wrong" type blood for 28 days, or whatever it is.
In the case of AB, I wonder how quickly the "old blood" would start to ressert itself if it had been replace by type O blood.
Hey, I bet you can change your blood type from liquid to solid. Want to try it?Infact I believe I can chnge it at will. Have not tested. Dont think I will test it for a while.
And my blood and body embodies the answer to all the sickness and diseases of this world.
But.. I dont think this world deserves it, yet.
So... Put the pancake on the bunny's head!!!!!!!!!!!
Now the question is...
is this normal? or is at least someting that does occur in someone else? the blood that changes I mean...
horseshoe crabs cannot operate computers. They've been around so long, that if they could they'd've invented the damn things. That they haven't shows that they can't. So you're not one of them.Besides, how do you know I'm not a horseshoe crab?
What you are talking about isn't unknown to biology. Apparently, you are a chimera, that is, a person with more than one set of DNA. The variable expression is probably do to a 'willed' hormonal shift.
It is also likely that you could survive after deep freezing.
Infact I believe I can chnge it at will. Have not tested. Dont think I will test it for a while.
"More than one set of DNA"? Hrm. Got any links to any peer-reviewed papers on this phenomenon? I know you're new, so you can't actually post links, but you can work around the system by adding spaces, like this:
http:// this. is. a. test. com/
I'd be interested in further reading.
By definition, a chimera is produced by the fusion of two different zygotes in a single embryo, while a mosaic contains genetically different cells issued from a single zygote.
The case of a healthy woman with serologic blood group AB and her biologic father showing blood group O was investigated. Further analysis, including blood, buccal swabs, and nail clippings, revealed a tetragametic chimerism