{"id":3403,"date":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-are-you-really-pregnant-the-truth-about-early-pregnancy-tests\/"},"modified":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","slug":"condition-pregnancy-are-you-really-pregnant-the-truth-about-early-pregnancy-tests","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-are-you-really-pregnant-the-truth-about-early-pregnancy-tests\/","title":{"rendered":"Are You Really Pregnant? The Truth About Early Pregnancy Tests"},"content":{"rendered":"
Is it really possible to find out whether I'm pregnant five days before I miss my period? According to the advertisements for one such pregnancy test, finding out early could help you adopt "a healthier lifestyle in the critical first stages of your baby's development."<\/p>\n
So why not pay extra for a super-sensitive test and end the suspense? There may be a good reason to wait.<\/p>\n
First, a pregnancy test primer: Whether it's a blood test or a urine test done at a doctor's office or in your own bathroom, a pregnancy test is positive when it detects the hormone hCG<\/a> in your system. The production of even a small amount of hCG means the fertilized egg has been successfully implanted<\/a> in the uterine lining.<\/p>\n The variance between at-home pregnancy tests is the amount of hCG they can detect, with early pregnancy tests detecting lower levels of the hormone.<\/p>\n "The commercial pregnancy tests range from 20 to 50 mIU\/mL. Since hCG levels double every two to three days, some tests may detect hCG two to three days earlier—so there may be some benefit to using a more sensitive test," says Seth Guller, PhD, the director of the Gyn\/Endocrine Laboratory at the Yale School of Medicine.<\/p>\n (Incidentally, the first sign that my last pregnancy was not, as had been diagnosed, a miscarriage<\/a>, was a blood test at six weeks that indicated a level of more than 44,000 mIU\/mL of hCG. That number goes up quickly<\/em>.)<\/p>\n Guller adds a surprising caveat: Any benefits of early pregnancy detection should be balanced by the fact that the majority of pregnancies ending in miscarriage occur very early.<\/p>\n