Conception - Pregnancy - Positive Pregnancy Test Conception - Pregnancy - Positive Pregnancy Test
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Positive Pregnancy Test

First thing to do, though, is make sure that you are, in fact, holding a positive pregnancy test before you go calling your friends, family, distant acquaintances, updating Facebook, sending out tweets and issuing a press release.

Take a deep breath, then go back and look at the instructions that came with the test. Did you follow them properly? Carefully compare the result on your test stick with the positive pregnancy test result on the instruction sheet – are they the same?

What does a positive pregnancy test mean?

In at least 97% of cases, if you’ve followed the instructions carefully, it means you are pregnant. If you’ve been hoping for a baby, congratulations!! If this comes as a big shock to you, though, you’ve got a lot of thinking and decision-making ahead of you and may not feel like celebrating the news.

Most pregnancy tests give a positive result if there is a certain amount of the hormone human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) in your urine. Around 8 to 10 days after conception the fertilised egg implants into the wall of the womb, signalling your body to release hCG, and levels of the hormone then climb steadily for the next few months.

A more sensitive test, which will detect 15 mIU (milli-international units) or over, will show a positive pregnancy test result much earlier than a less sensitive test (which might not give a positive pregnancy test result until there is 50 mIU or more of hCG in the urine).

Medically, an hCG level that’s less than 5mIU/ml is considered negative for pregnancy, and levels above 25 mIU/ml is considered a positive pregnancy test.

How can I be certain the pregnancy test really is positive?

False positive pregnancy test results, while rare, do occur sometimes.

If you don’t look at the test until after the ‘expiry’ period (usually around ten minutes) then you might get an evaporation line, which can be confused with a positive result. (Did we mention checking the instruction sheet carefully?)

If you are taking certain fertility drugs or any other medication, which may artificially raise the levels of hCG in your body, it is possible to get a false positive pregnancy test result. Or, if there is a manufacturing error in the pregnancy test kit itself, you may have an error in the test – but it’s pretty rare for this to occur.

One way to be sure is to do another pregnancy test. If you want to be really neurotic about it (and many Huggies® moms have confessed to doing this) – you could go to the pharmacy and purchase a different brand of pregnancy test, then try again (perhaps first thing the next morning, when hormone levels tend to be higher). 

Your next step should be to make an appointment with your doctor to confirm and discuss the positive pregnancy test results, get a check-up and some guidance on what is best for you to do next. 

Do be aware that between 25 and 50% of fertilised eggs don’t make it past the first few weeks, and a further 15% of recognised pregnancies end in miscarriage. 

One of the well-known issues that have come up since newer, more sensitive pregnancy tests that can be taken up to a week before your period is due, is that many women become aware they are pregnant in the earliest stages of pregnancy, when the chance of early miscarriage is very high. 

This might mean that you experience a pretty big emotional rollercoaster; you realise you are pregnant and go through all the emotions that accompany that discovery, and then you get what seems to be a normal period, but can also involve your body expelling the pregnancy, which at that stage is such a small amount of tissue that it may not feel any different at all.

 For this reason, many women choose not to do a pregnancy test until the after their period is due. 

What if the positive pregnancy test is very faint?

There are a few different reasons for you to get a very faint line in a positive pregnancy test. 

First, you might have very low levels of hCG, usually because it is very early in the pregnancy or, in some cases, because your body is not producing the usual amount of the hormone.

Low hCG levels can occur in normal pregnancies. Everyone is different, so don’t stress out about it too much. You’ll find out more information about how everything is going as the pregnancy progresses.

Some tests will give a faint response in the case of low hCG levels. Taking another pregnancy test in a few days should then give you a far stronger result – if you can wait that long.

If you’re feeling impatient, but you didn’t do the test first thing in the morning you might want to try that next time because this is when hormone levels in the body are at their highest.

 

Good luck!

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