How long can a person with panda blood live?

  In general, the life expectancy of individuals with panda blood type is not significantly different from that of normal people with other blood types. The greatest risk comes from the scarcity of blood products after trauma or bleeding, which can lead to delayed treatment.  Human blood types are classified as type A, B, AB, and O based on the type of red blood cell surface antigen. In addition, there are two subtypes, RH-positive and RH-negative. Panda blood is the RH(-) blood type. This blood type is only a rare blood type, which does not cause special diseases and does not affect life expectancy under normal circumstances. However, in China’s Han population, the vast majority are RH-positive, and only about 1% of individuals are RH(-). Therefore, when panda blood types are faced with serious trauma or massive bleeding disorders that urgently require blood transfusion treatment, most blood banks are unable to provide sufficient blood products, resulting in delayed treatment and threatening patients’ lives. In addition, once a patient receives allotypic blood without knowing his or her own blood type, it may lead to serious adverse reactions, often resulting in death within a short period of time Therefore, individuals with panda blood need to take protective measures to avoid injuries and avoid blood transfusions as much as possible, and even if they do, they should only receive blood of the same type.