File:  <rhneg.htm>                                  [Additional Websites and #2 ]
 
| Rhesus
  Incompatibility Disease   (Rh Disease) [Contacts]     What is Rh Disease
  and what causes it?            
  Everyone is born with a specific blood type and an RH factor. 
  For example, you may have blood type "A" with an Rh factor of
  "positive" (A+). This blood typing stays with you for life.            
  For full details on blood types, please seek information on Blood
  Typing elsewhere.               In 85% of people, the Rhesus
  Factor is positive (Rh+).  For the other 15%, the Rh factor is negative
  (Rh-).             If a woman has Rh-negative blood
  and the man has Rh-positive blood, then it is possible for problems to
  arise.              
  Note: Rh Disease can only occur in women that have Rh Negative blood.            
  Note: If both the mother and baby are Rh negative, then there is no
  risk.             Note: If both the mother and
  natural father are Rh negative, then there is no risk because the child must
  also be Rh negative.  However, most
  doctors prefer to presume that all Rh-negative women are at risk and will
  treat her accordingly.             If an Rh-negative woman has a baby
  that is Rh positive, then it is possible for some of the baby's blood to
  enter into her system.  This can happen under several circumstances:   ·         
  During the birth,   ·         
  Naturally (between 28 weeks and delivery),   ·         
  During an amniocentesis,   ·         
  At an abortion,  ·         
  When a miscarriage occurs.                      If the baby's Rh positive blood
  enters a mother who is Rh Negative, then her immune system sees the cells as
  'incompatible' or 'foreign' and will subsequently produce anti-rhesus
  antibodies to try to destroy them for her own self-protection.             This may not seem like a big
  problem, however, if she has another pregnancy where the baby is Rh positive,
  then these antibodies that have formed will pass into the baby's bloodstream
  via the placenta and attack the red blood cells of the baby.             Once these naturally created
  anti-rhesus antibodies are present in the mother's bloodstream, they will
  remain for life in the same way as antibodies for other diseases:  chicken pox for example.   |