Selected article for: "ABO blood and blood group"

Author: Xianfei Zeng; Hongyan Fan; Dongxue Lu; Fang Huang; Xi Meng; Zhuo Li; Mei Tang; Jing Zhang; Nannan Liu; Zhixin Liu; Jingya Zhao; Wen Yin; Qunxing An; Xijing Zhang; Xingbin Hu
Title: Association between ABO blood groups and clinical outcome of coronavirus disease 2019: Evidence from two cohorts
  • Document date: 2020_4_17
  • ID: idd8uq9h_8
    Snippet: The relationship between blood groups and human diseases is more than a causal association of incidence. Blood groups may influence the progress and outcomes of diseases. The blood type O affects the volumes of grey matter in the cerebellum, which might be associated with the decline in cognitive function [13] . A retrospective study was conducted by a Japanese group to analyze the impact of ABO blood group on outcomes in patients with severe tra.....
    Document: The relationship between blood groups and human diseases is more than a causal association of incidence. Blood groups may influence the progress and outcomes of diseases. The blood type O affects the volumes of grey matter in the cerebellum, which might be associated with the decline in cognitive function [13] . A retrospective study was conducted by a Japanese group to analyze the impact of ABO blood group on outcomes in patients with severe trauma. The results suggested that blood type O was associated with high mortality and less ventilator-free days [14] . Moreover, blood groups have been shown to be relevant to the development and outcomes of chronic heart failure [15] and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma [16] . However, other studies provided conflicting evidence that blood groups were not risk factors for several diseases [17] [18] .

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