8 Reasons Everyone Should Know Their Blood Type

Many Americans don't know their blood type, but that knowledge can actually tip you off about your risk for certain medical conditions.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
kerenby/Shutterstock

What’s in a blood type?

Potentially a lot, according to research, including a review of studies published in the Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Systems Biology and Medicine, that correlates different blood groups to everything from risk of heart disease and dementia to urinary tract infections and the norovirus. While none of the studies are conclusive about cause and effect (they can’t say X blood type causes Y disease) and any increased risks are still pretty small, the research does highlight the importance of knowing your type—A, B, AB, or O—and how it could affect your well-being. Plus, here’s the real reason blood is red.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Ralwel/Shutterstock

Blood clots: Type AB, A, and B increases risk

Danish researchers studied how blood type interacts with a genetic predisposition for deep-vein thrombosis (DVT), or blood clots in the lower legs that can travel to the lungs and become life-threatening. After analyzing data on about 66,000 people over more than 30 years, they found that those with type AB, A, or B had a 40 percent higher risk of DVT than people with type O, the most common type.

When the scientists did further analysis to see which factors have the biggest impact on DVT risk on a population level, they found that an AB blood type contributed to about 20 percent of blood clots; genetic mutations accounted for 11 percent, being overweight accounted for 16 percent, and smoking accounted for 6 percent. Here are the blood clot symptoms you should definitely not ignore.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Lightspring/Shutterstock

Heart disease: Type AB, B, and A all increase risk


People whose blood type is A, B, or AB have an increased risk of heart disease and shorter life spans than people who have type O blood, according to a large study published in BMC Medicine. After following more than 50,000 middle-age and elderly people for seven years, on average, researchers found that as many as 9 percent of cardiovascular deaths were attributed to having non-O blood types. However, as any doctor will tell you, lifestyle factors like weight, smoking, and diet, which, unlike blood type, are modifiable, have a much greater impact on heart disease. Learn how men with this blood type could be more likely to have a heart attack.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Life science of anatomy/Shutterstock

Stomach Cancer: Types A and AB increases risk

Researchers have known for a while that people with blood type A are at risk for stomach cancer. But research published in BMC Cancer shows that people with blood type AB are also at risk. Using genetic data from a large number of cases and controls, researchers found a link between both blood types and gastric cancer in Chinese populations. A review of 39 previous studies confirmed their findings.
Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Sebastian Kaulitzki/Shutterstock

Fertility: Type O reduces it

Women with this blood type were twice as likely to have blood levels of the hormone FSH high enough to indicate low ovarian reserve, a measure of fertility, according to a study published in Human Reproduction. Researchers couldn’t say for sure why, though. Given that type O blood is the most prevalent across all U.S. ethnicities, it doesn’t pay to worry too much about it. Age is a far more important risk factor for fertility problems. Here are some more surprising facts about fertility.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
adike/Shutterstock

Pregnancy risks

This has nothing to do with your “letter” blood type or the type determined by the ABO grouping system. This has to do with what’s known as the Rhesus (Rh) factor, which determines whether your blood type is positive or negative. This could cause complications in pregnant women if the baby’s Rh blood type is different from the mother’s. For instance, if the mother has a negative blood type and the baby has a positive one, the mother’s body can actually build up antibodies against the baby’s blood type. Luckily, this doesn’t affect the baby, but it could have a negative effect on future pregnancies. Fortunately, doctors can give pregnant women a shot early in their pregnancy that can prevent Rh-incompatibility problems. Learn why parents-to-be need vaccinations just as much as babies do.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Naeblys/Shutterstock

Dementia and memory loss: Type AB increases risk

People with type AB blood have an 82 percent greater risk for cognitive decline later in life, according to a study published in Neurology. Study participants with higher levels of the Factor VIII protein, which helps with blood clotting, were 24 percent more likely to develop memory problems—regardless of their blood type—than people with lower levels. Blood type, however, is far from the only, or even most important, factor that affects your risk for cognitive decline. High blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking all increase your risk for dementia.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
Sebastian Kaulitzki/Shutterstock

Stroke: Type O has the lowest risk

People with type AB have a higher risk of cardiovascular issues such as stroke, according to a study published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Biologists are still investigating why this might be; one possible explanation is that non-O blood types contain more of the Von Willebrand factor, a protein that has been connected to blood clotting and stroke in the past.

Reasons-Everyone-Should-Know-Their-Blood-Type
AuntSpray/Shutterstock

Mosquitoes like Type O blood

If you find yourself scratching bug bites all summer long, your blood type might be to blame. In a one small study, researchers found that type Os are up to twice as attractive to mosquitoes as type As, with type Bs falling somewhere in the middle. Here are some more reasons you’re being bitten by mosquitoes (some of which you actually can control).

Sources
Medically reviewed by Michael Spertus, MD, on January 06, 2020

Meghan Jones
Meghan Jones is a Staff Writer for RD.com who has been storytelling since before she could write. She graduated from Marist College with a Bachelor of Arts in English and has been writing for Reader's Digest since 2017. Her creative nonfiction piece "Anticipation" was published in Angles literary magazine in spring 2017. Meghan is a proud Hufflepuff and member of Team Cap.