Rh sensitization is an antibody response that may occur when a
woman with Rh-negative blood has been exposed to blood from her Rh-positive
fetus. Once she is sensitized, her immune system can make antibodies that can
destroy Rh-positive red blood cells.
An Rh factor (Rh antigen) is one of the markers on the surface of
red blood cells that the immune system can recognize. A person whose blood
contains the Rh factor is Rh-positive. A person whose blood does not contain
the Rh factor is Rh-negative.
Most women who become sensitized do so during childbirth, when
their blood mixes with Rh-positive fetal blood. However, blood mixing sometimes
occurs during a miscarriage, an abortion, or an injury (especially to the
woman's abdomen).
Rh sensitization is
no danger to the pregnant woman and usually is no harm to the first Rh-positive
fetus. However, future Rh-positive fetuses are in danger of having their red
blood cells destroyed before birth by the pregnant woman's immune system. This
danger can usually be prevented by giving the Rh-negative woman an Rh immune
globulin injection (such as RhoGAM) at 24 to 28 weeks of pregnancy, and after
delivery if the baby is Rh-positive.
An Rh-negative woman can only become pregnant with an Rh-positive
fetus if the father is Rh-positive.