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Rh Blood Grouping Rh antigens • Rh antigens were originally discovered in the RBCs of Rhesus Monkey- Named as ‘Rh antigens’ or ‘Rh Factor’ • Later on Rh antigens were also detected in most of the human beings • The people having Rh antigen or factor are called ‘Rh Positive’ Rhesus Blood Group System • First demonstrated by testing human blood with rabbit anti sera against red cells of Rhesus monkey & classifying Rh negative & Rh positive. Rhesus Blood Group System • The genotype is determined by the inheritance of 3 pairs of (SIX) closely linked allelic genes situated on chromosome 9 • Six common type of Rh antigens in human beings C,D,E, c, d, & e. • Person having C cannot have c antigen • Same is true for D-d & E-e groups Rhesus Blood Group System • The gene ‘d’ has no antigenic expression. So there are only five effective antigens. • The foetus inherits one gene from each group as a set of Cde, cde etc from each parent • Subsequently less common antigens Cw, Du, Es have also been found. Rhesus Blood Group System • C/c & E/e are weak antigens and impractical to match. • ‘D’ antigen is by far the most immunogenic in the Rh system. Rh antigens • Antigen D is most widely present antigen • The persons having either of C, D, E antigens are Rh Positive • The persons having either of c, d, e antigens are Rh negative Rhesus Blood Group System • 78 genotypes are possible. Most frequent genotypes are – – Cde/cde – Cde/cDe – Cde/cDE – cDE/cde – cde/cde – cdE/cde – Cde/cde (33%) (18%) (12%) (11%) (15%) (1%) (1%) Rhesus Blood Group System • For clinical & all practical purposes it is enough to know whether one is Rh POSITIVE or NEGATIVE against anti D sera. • Rh positive 85% • Rh negative 15% Rhesus Blood Group System • Incidence of Rh negative varies in different races: – Mongoloids- nil, – Chinese & Japanese- 1-2%, – Indians-5%, – Africans-5-8%, – Causcasians-15-17% – Basques-30-35%. Antibodies for Rh factor • ABO system antibodies are spontaneously formed (Landsteiner law) • Anti Rh antibodies are normally not present in Rh+ or Rh – person Formation of anti Rh- antibodies: RBCs containing Rh factor injected into Rh Negative person. Anti Rh antibodies develop slowly, Maximum conc 2 to 4 months later. Multiple exposures to Rh factor result in Rh negative person being strongly “sensitized”to Rh factor. Characteristics of the transfusion reactions: • Rh negative never exposed to Rh positive blood—no immediate reaction. • Anti Rh antibodies formed in sufficient quantities during the next 2-4 weeks. • Agglutination of transfused cells. • RBCs hemolyzed by the tissue macrophage system. • Mild delayed transfusion reaction occurs. • Subsequent exposure to Rh positive blood into the Rh negative person, transfusion reaction is greatly enhanced and can be immediate and severe. • • • • • • Erythroblastosis Fetalis Hemolytic disease of the new born Icterus Neonatorum Rh- mother Rh+ Fetus due to Rh+ father No reaction in first pregnancy Rh+ cells of baby may enter maternal blood during labor • Mother will develop Anti D • Next pregnancy with Rh+ baby will cause the disease Pathogenesis Rh Negative Women Man Rh positive (Homo/Hetero) Rh Neg Fetus No problem Fetus Mother previously sensitized Secondary immune response antibody (IgG) Fetus Haemolysis Rh positive Fetus Rh+ve R.B.C.s enter Maternal circulation Non sensitized Mother ? Primary immune response Fetus unaffected, 1st Baby usually escapes. Mother gets sensitized? Erythroblastosis Fetalis • Anti D cross placental barrier • Rh+ cells of baby react • Characterised by Agglutination and phagocytosis of the fetal RBCs. • Hemolysis, Hb released into blood. • Fetus macrophages convert Hb into bilirubin. ↑Bilirubin→ Jaundice. • Severe Anemia → ↑↑Erythropoiesis → Appearance of immature, even nucleated cells (Blast cells) in the blood • Hematopoietic tissues, liver and spleen get enlarged and produce RBCs trying to replace for the hemolyzed RBCs. • Because of rapid production, early forms of RBCs including nucleated blastic forms of RBCs are released into circulation. Erythroblastosis Fetalis Blast Cells Erythroblastosis Fetalis • Death very common • Permanent mental impairment if the baby survives • Damaged motor area of brain due to precipitation of bilirubin in neurons (Kernicterus) • Exchange transfusion with Rh- blood just after birth is the only treatment • Prevention- Injection of anti D antibody to Rhmother in the first gestation after delivery for immediate destruction of Rh+ cells of the baby Treatment of erythroblastosis fetalis: EXCHANGE TRANSFUSION: • 400ml of Rh negative blood is infused over a period of 1.5 or more hours while the neonate’s own Rh positive blood is being removed. • This is done several times to keep bilirubin level low and prevent kernicterus. • By the time these transfused Rh negative cells are replaced by infant’s own Rh positive cells (6 weeks), anti Rh antibodies that have come from the mother have been destroyed. Prevention • RhoGAM® • Contains IgG anti-D (anti-Rh) • Prevents Rh immunization • Manufactured from human plasma that contains anti-D • A single 300mcg dose will suppress the immune response to 15 ml of Rhpositive RBCs (approx 30 mL whole blood) Mechanism of Action • Suppresses the immune response of Rhnegative individuals to Rh-positive RBC’s • Is not effective once Rh immunization has occurred Prevention of Rh Incompatibility • Premarital counseling? • Proper matching of blood in transfusions particularly in women before childbearing. • Blood grouping must for every woman, before 1st pregnancy. • On exposure to Rh +ve Blood Anti Rh Immunoglobulin should be given as early as possible • Proper management of unsensitised Rh negative pregnancies. POSSIBLE MECHANISM OF ACTION OF ANTI –D ANTIBODY: Anti-D antibody attaches to D antigen sites on Rh positive fetal red blood cells that may cross the placenta and enter the mother’s circulation thereby interfering with the immune response to the D antigen. Erythroblastosis Fetalis Thank-you Questions ??