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We are what we are because of our genes. We inherit pairs of them from both our parents at the moment of conception. Some genes are more dominant than others, and our rhesus state is one of them.
At your first antenatal screening, blood tests are taken in order to determine your blood type (A, B, AB or O) and your rhesus status (Rh-positive or Rh-negative).
- If you have the rhesus factor (which is a protein on the surface of your red blood cells) you are Rh-positive, if you dont you are Rh-negative. Most people (about 85%) are Rh-positive.
- The rhesus state only matters in pregnancy if the mother is Rh-negative, the father is Rh-positive and the baby is also Rh-positive.
There are, in fact, various rhesus genes. Among them are c, d and e, which can be either positive (C, D, E) or negative (c, d, e). It is the d genes that particularly concern us.
Rh(D) positive cells contain a substance (D antigen) which can stimulate Rh(d) negative blood to produce harmful antibodies that destroy red cells. The harmful antibody is called anti-D and can be produced if a mother is Rh-negative but her baby is Rh-positive.
Rhesus incompatibility doesnt occur with first pregnancies because the antibodies arent present in the mothers blood. However, in subsequent pregnancies, if the babies are rhesus positive, there may be a problem. The mothers antibodies will cross over the placenta into the babys blood and, regarding it as foreign, will try to break it down.
This causes problems with the babys haemoglobin level (the iron-carrying element in the red blood cells) which then falls, causing anaemia. Blood transfusion are then necessary at birth and babies could also be severely jaundiced.
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