its realy very helpfull for me... i lose my twin babys😢😢😢😢 becouse i forget to take d tox injection my first miscarage. its second tyme i loss my babys.....but this tyme i take injection....plz pray for me i want safe pregnency....pllzzzz
So now u okay sister? Did u take injection urself or ur doctor do it for u ? Can u tell me plz coz this happend with me as well I have negative blood group
If I can have all my science teachers speak as clear as you, I would’ve probably have a career in the health field. That was well said and explained clearly for better understanding of the subject. I’m RH negative ☺️ so thank you
I went through this with both my kids.Both of my children are O+ and I'm O- I was told I wasn't eligible for the Rhogam shot with my daughter, so I was high risk. The mental trama from that, knowing my body was attacking my child was so straining. I praise God she came out healthy, and is living abundantly today!
You have no idea how much your comment and experience gives me hope. I am O negative and lately I've been stressing a lot about these factors. Thank you and Amen. May God bless your family
Ladies I'm glad that my testimony was able to give all of you hope. I pray that you have healthy pregnancies, and God protects your littles, and brings them into this world full of life, love, happiness, and joy! I'll continue to pray for all of you during you're journeys! ❤️
@@ZeroToFinals if male is having O negative and female is having A positive blood group the what treatment they should do for conception of pregnancy.plz reply Sir. .. Will be waiting for ur reply sir
@@muskaanchoudhary5870 actually male has nothing to do with this(even though he may play a part in determining the baby's blood)...everything depends on the mom...since u said the female is positive...so theres no need to worry since she already has the antigen that can recognise the positive blood(baby) as its own...if its negative(baby) still no problem cuz it has no antigen that triggers antibodies to attack it...
@@nguyentuong8529 thanks bro But I want to clear this whether the female should do vaccination or not for conception of pregnancy.. If there's problem in conception .
@@muskaanchoudhary5870 what kind of problem do u mean?if the mom is negative and the baby is positive...then u give the anti D injection to remove the antigen of the positive baby before it triggers the mom immune to attack the baby on the second pregnancy
Thank you for the explanation, it is very refreshing to have someone bring light to things at more than a fifth grade level. This was understandable by any adult without a medical degree and I appreciate the breakdown of reality without resorting to dumbing down of the subject and speaking in diluted terms which offer no explanation.
I’m also RH- and have had 3 pregnancies that were successful. Only 1 that ended in a miscarriage because it was my first pregnancy, I didn’t know anything about my blood type and this kind of information. Thank you for this, it’s going to help someone in need.
Did they put you on blood thinners ? I’m the same and I’m on blood thinners and so far so good but my antibodies are out of range now and they are saying that’s not good. I’m so nervous
Thanks so much I have blood type O negative & I've always had such a hard time understanding how pregnancy will work out for me once the time comes that we decide to have a baby & this video really helped me not to worry so much about my ability to get pregnant or to carry a healthy baby to term.
This is incredible! I went on youtube to watch a video on Rh allo-immunization before I need to dive in my readings, and this was exactly what I was looking for! Thank you so much!
My mother is rh- her body rejected me during the last 2weeks of pregnancy. She and I nearly died during delivery. 9yrs later she gave birth to my sister with no issues. This is all so fascinating!
@Heart of Texas no i was delivered 2 weeks early. She was having seizures during her delivery, but thankfully we both survived. She didn't have the same result with my sister, normal pregnancy, normal delivery, my sister is not rh- 🤷♀️
@@MM-xv4fznothing happens to the mother only to the child in rare cases. It wasn't because of the shot that she didn't take. Believe me this shot is more harmful! Do some research on side effects
That's so inspiring... I am a Rh - mum, gave birth to my Angel . She is +ve I was so scared what if we don't make it... But God heard my cry and now am almost celebrating her 1st birthday 🎉❤
My mom is O + universal donors are very rare...sadly you can only recieve 0 😔 I still need to find out mine...I don't know what my dad was even though he would have had it on his dog tags...my parents divorced when I was 5 and he died when I was 20 and I only had one phone conversation in between and that was not on my list of things to ask
Thanks for the great explanation. I gave my 1st plasma donation today and have Anti D antibodies due to multiple blood transfusions. Nice to know that it will be used for such a wonderful purpose.
Thank you so much .You explained it in a very simplified manner. Even a lay man can understand it. Kindly make more video's as these are very much helpful fr medical students .
Thank you so much for this video! I am on my fourth pregnancy and have had issues with my blood creating anti d itself after my first pregnancy. This video just explained so much to me after all this time of midwives and even consultants not explaining it properly!
Thank you for easing my mind. My wife sent me her chart with a positive and I thought oh no here we go again. But positive means she’s good thank you lord 🙏🏽
Wow! Best time that I have had it explained! 4 pregnancies and with that amazing shot afterwards as all of my babies were positve after birth . And they are alive and thriving and into adulthood now. I am O neg, My children are all healthy thanks to the amazing doctors and scientists.
Oh my word!!!!! This was SO WELL DONE! I am a.Dr working in a neurology department. Havent been exposed to obstetrics-fullforce in over 15 to 16 years, rendering me practically amnestic of all of the above (although I understood it so well back then). This video brought it all back in a jiffy! It was so well taught! This guy is a genius!!
I'm glad I found your channel. Everything was simplified and explained clearly. Thank you. If it interests you, can you make a video on rh null blood type? I'm quite curious about how it is possible for those few people to survive with the golden blood when doctors have speculated they shouldn't have survived in the womb? I can't find any good source from the internet but I believe you're capable of discussing it.
VERY CLEARLY EXPLAINED, I THINK INFO IN THIS VIDEO STUCK IN MIND FOREVER AND EVER, THANKS ALOT ZERO TO FINALS WHY OUR MEDICAL COLLEGE PROFESSORS CANT EXPLAIN LIKE THIS. WHY IN MEDICAL COLLEGE EVERY TOPIC IS SO DIFFICULT AND CONTAINS MORE THAN 40 TO 50 SLIDES , THIS VIDEO SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN SYLLABUS
I am A- My husband is O+.. I got two Anti D shots during pregnancy bc I was am a fitness instructor and always jumping around. I am very grateful bc our baby ended being O+ like her dad.
I am the 2nd O positive child of an AB negative mother born in January 1950 before medicine caught up with this. We were usually destined to die. My mother said I was as yellow as a buttercup. It took 3 whole body blood transfusions from donors to save my life. At 25, I developed a whole slew of autoimmune issues. My modern doctors first told me it was all in my head. I didn't test for lupus or any of the other autoimmune diseases, so it had to be in my head. I told them about this, and they said it had nothing to do with it. BTW, I was born in a town with one doctor and 3 nurses.
The problem with the Rhogam shots that you did NOT mention is that they carry severe and deadly adverse events - Intravascular hemolysis (IVH) leading to death has been reported in patients treated for immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) with Rho(D) immune globulin. IVH can lead to clinically compromising anemia and multi-system organ failure, including acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), acute renal insufficiency, renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Alert patients and closely monitor for the signs and symptoms of IVH in a health care setting for at least 8 hours after administration for ITP. Perform a dipstick urinalysis at baseline, 2 hours, 4 hours after administration, and prior to the end of the monitoring period. If signs and/or symptoms of IVH are present or suspected, post-treatment laboratory tests should be performed. Hemolytic reaction includes hypotension, nausea, chills, headache, and a decrease in haptoglobin and hemoglobin. Disseminated intravascular coagulation, Intravascular hemolysis, hemolysis resulting in death, clinically compromising anemia, extravascular hemolysis, hemolytic reaction, Hemoglobinemia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, vertigo, Tachycardia, hypotension, erythema, pruritus, Increase in blood pressure, Cardiac arrest, cardiac failure, myocardial infarction, etc.
While I know that it is not common practice everywhere, the Rhogam should actually be given after any miscarriage, not just a late miscarriage. The D antigen develops very early on the fetal blood cell and can be found on red blood cells as early as 5 to 6 weeks gestational age. I know women who were most likely sensitized due to an early miscarriage. And I was possibly sensitized by a very small bleed that took place at around 6 weeks gestation.
I didn’t even know about my strange and very rare blood type until I became pregnant w/my 1st child. I had to get a shot after so many weeks to stop my body from attacking & killing my own baby in my womb. I don’t recall receiving a shot post birth. However, it is a tiring event & I probably wouldn’t remember if I had a multitude of shots after giving birth 🤣. I try to research about my blood type, but usually stop because it freaks me out. Some believe that the RH NEG are actually half alien. Also I came across a government website that asks rh neg individuals to register into, some type of data base. Of course, I didn’t register because I think that’s altogether creepy. Mahalo 🤙🏽for the information.
Although the database may seem like some weird government thing its actually so that if other people with your blood type need blood they call on you to ask for a donation, similarly if you were to need blood for some medical reason they contact people on that same list to help you, so, all in all, seems weird but actually saves lives!
great clear explanation, just to clarify- is the reason why the baby’s Rhesus blood type doesn’t matter if the mother is Rhesus positive because the baby hasn’t developed an immune system yet to form Anti-D antibodies?
my other question is where does this protein factor come from? Why do some people have it and others don't? It didn't just appear out of thin air. Something got it started.
I never really understood the blood type thing. I had to have the anti d after my miscarriage and again after my second child. My Husband is O+ and I'm A-. My daughter is O+ and my son is A+. It's very interesting to learn about this. Thankyou for this. It was very easy to understand. 😉
I might have missed something - if the mother's anti-RhoD Ig can cross the placenta into the baby's bloodstream and cause HDN, why can't the artificially administered anti-RhoD do the same thing?
@@karimnasif so antibodies have two parts, the variable region that covers the antigen and the constant region that induces an immune response. Only the variable region is injected- it covers the antigen so that proper antibodies cannot 'see it'- hence no immune response
@@WeavingWonders so antibodies have two parts, the variable region that covers the antigen and the constant region that induces an immune response. Only the variable region is injected- it covers the antigen so that proper antibodies cannot 'see it'- hence no immune response
so antibodies have two parts, the variable region that covers the antigen and the constant region that induces an immune response. Only the variable region is injected- it covers the antigen so that proper antibodies cannot 'see it'- hence no immune response
Thanks for the info. Because my laboratory result is rhesus positive I'm scared because I don't understand what it mean thanks. I'm happy to know this and there's nothing to worry, my English is poor try to understand.
Thank you soooooo much! This is way better than the lectures. I have one more question: what if the Rh- mom has already produce antiD antibody herself, therefore the immunoglobulin injection will be ineffective, right? What should the practitioners do at this time?
Thanks for your comment! You are correct, once the mother has been sensitised it is too late for anti-D. If this woman becomes pregnant again and the fetus/baby is rhesus positive then that baby is at risk of developing fetal anaemia and / or haemolytic disease of the newborn where the anti-rhesus antibodies attack their red blood cells and cause anaemia during pregnancy and shortly after birth. This requires close monitoring during pregnancy and in certain instances the fetus may require intrauterine transfusions or transfusions shortly after birth.