If you are Rh-negative, your red blood cells do not have a marker called Rh factor on them. Rh-positive blood
does have this marker. If your blood mixes with Rh-positive blood, your immune system will react to the Rh factor
by making antibodies to destroy it. This immune system response is called Rh sensitization.
Prevention
RhoGAM
Blood tests
Kleihauer–Betke
Coombs test
Full blood count
Bilirubin
Management
Antenatal
Serial Ultrasound and Doppler examinations
Quantitative analysis of maternal anti-RhD antibodies
Intrauterine blood transfusion
Intraperitoneal transfusion
Intravascular transfusion
Early delivery
Postnatal
Phototherapy
Exchange transfusion
Sensitizing events during pregnancy
therapeutic abortion
miscarriage
amniocentesis
c-section
external cephalic version
abdominal trauma
ectopic pregnancy
Degree
Mild cases
mild anaemia with reticulocytosis
moderate or severe cases
more marked anaemia
erythroblastosis
very severe cases
haemolytic disease of the newborn
hydrops fetalis
stillbirth.
Who gets Rh sensitization during pregnancy
If the mother is Rh-negative and the father is Rh-positive, there is a
good chance the baby will have Rh-positive blood. Rh sensitization can
occur.
If both parents have Rh-negative blood, the baby will have
Rh-negative blood. Since the mother?s blood and the baby?s
blood match, sensitization will not occur.