Here, Educate yourself.
Could you be pregnant? Most likely you won't notice any symptoms until about the time you've missed a period — or a week or two later.
If you're not keeping track of your menstrual cycle or if it varies widely from one month to the next, you may not be sure when to expect your period. But if you start to experience some of the symptoms below — not all women get them all — and you haven't had a period for a while, you may very well be pregnant. Take a home pregnancy test to find out for sure!
10. Tender, swollen breasts
One of the early signs of pregnancy is sensitive, sore breasts caused by increasing levels of hormones. The soreness may feel like an exaggerated version of how your breasts feel before your period. Your discomfort should diminish significantly after the first trimester, as your body adjusts to the hormonal changes.
9. Fatigue
Feeling tired all of a sudden? No, make that exhausted. No one knows for sure what causes early pregnancy fatigue, but it's possible that rapidly increasing levels of the hormone progesterone are contributing to your sleepiness.
You should start to feel more energetic once you hit your second trimester, although fatigue usually returns late in pregnancy when you're carrying around a lot more weight and some of the common discomforts of pregnancy make it more difficult to get a good night's sleep.
8. Implantation bleeding
Some women have a small amount of vaginal bleeding around 11 or 12 days after conception (close to the time you might notice a missed period). The bleeding may be caused by the fertilized egg burrowing into the blood-rich lining of your uterus — a process that starts just six days after fertilization — but no one knows for sure.
The bleeding is very light (appearing as red spotting or pink or reddish-brown staining) and lasts only a day or two. (Let your practitioner know if you notice any bleeding or spotting, particularly if it's accompanied by pain, since this can be a sign of an ectopic pregnancy.)
7. Nausea or vomiting
If you're like most women, morning sickness won't hit until about a month after conception. (A lucky few escape it altogether.) But some women do start to feel queasy a bit earlier. And not just in the morning, either — pregnancy-related nausea and vomiting can be a problem morning, noon, or night.
About half of women with nausea feel complete relief by the beginning of the second trimester. For most others it takes another month or so for the queasiness to ease up.
6. Increased sensitivity to odors
If you're newly pregnant, it's not uncommon to feel repelled by the smell of a bologna sandwich or cup of coffee and for certain aromas to trigger your gag reflex. Though no one knows for sure, this may be a side effect of rapidly increasing amounts of estrogen in your system. You may also find that certain foods you used to enjoy are suddenly completely repulsive to you.
5. Abdominal bloating
Hormonal changes in early pregnancy may leave you feeling bloated, similar to the feeling some women have just before their period arrives. That's why your clothes may feel snugger than usual at the waistline, even early on when your uterus is still quite small.
4. Frequent urination
Shortly after you become pregnant, you may find yourself hurrying to the bathroom all the time. Why? Mostly because during pregnancy the amount of blood and other fluids in your body increases, which leads to extra fluid being processed by your kidneys and ending up in your bladder.
This symptom may start as early as six weeks into your first trimester and continue or worsen as your pregnancy progresses and your growing baby exerts more pressure on your bladder.
3. A missed period
If you're usually pretty regular and your period doesn't arrive on time, you'll probably take a pregnancy test long before you notice any of the above symptoms. But if you're not regular or you're not keeping track of your cycle, nausea and breast tenderness and extra trips to the bathroom may signal pregnancy before you realize you didn't get your period.
2. Your basal body temperature stays high
If you've been charting your basal body temperature and you see that your temperature has stayed elevated for 18 days in a row, you're probably pregnant.
And finally...
1. The proof: A positive home pregnancy test
In spite of what you might read on the box, many home pregnancy tests are not sensitive enough to detect most pregnancies until about a week after a missed period. So if you decide to take one earlier than that and get a negative result, try again in a few days.
Once you've gotten a positive result, make an appointment with your practitioner. Now head over to our pregnancy area. Also, don't forget to update your profile and sign up for our "My Baby This Week" newsletter. Congratulations!
2006-11-02 10:26:07
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Well the first obvious sign is a missed or late period. Charting temps works pretty well also. Your body temp rises and will continue to stay fairly high if your pregnant..if your not your temp will take a nose dive and usually your period follows a day or two later.
Some women have signs right away. Breast tenderness, tired, sleepy etc...but 72 hours might be a little soon to have heavy signs.
There are a few tests you can buy over the counter. They all vary. There is one you can take before your due to start. And I know there's another you can take as soon as your late. I don't remember who makes which but a trip to your local store and checking the labels should tell you which is which.
Sorry I dont know much about the sponge. But nothing aside from tubal ligation is 100% So I imagine putting the sponge in incorrectly could indeed affect it's effectiveness.
Hope that helps!
Good luck!
2006-11-02 10:32:16
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answer #2
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answered by Synergi005 2
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The first signs of pregnancy are sore, tender breasts and feeling extremely tired. I seriously doubt you would feel any of these symptoms in the first 72 hours of becoming pregnant.... probably just psychological! A test would only register 2 weeks after conception at the very earliest. There is no birth control that is 100% unless you don't have sex!!!
2006-11-02 10:30:13
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answer #3
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answered by Little*Boots 3
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I suggestion for certain my interval used to be coming. Saturday and Sunday I had the worst cramps I had felt in years, Monday after no interval I proven and there used to be my optimistic. The cramping endured however lessened over the following week or so. Good Luck to you!
2016-09-01 06:17:09
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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First sign of pregnancy is a little blue line in the window. You can't detect pregnancy until after your period was due.
2006-11-02 10:27:43
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answer #5
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answered by stienbabe 4
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the symptom almost similar like your monthly period. (menstruation cycle). your body temp is little bit high than usual. condom is better than sponge. if you don't put correctly, you are not pretty safe.
2006-11-02 10:33:36
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answer #6
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answered by gogh 1
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Fatigue is a common symptom. Everyone I know that was pregnant would constantly get tired.
2006-11-02 10:27:17
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answer #7
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answered by Pinky 3
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morning sickness... tender breasts.. sometimes spotting.. or even tenderness in your belly...
some know right away.. others take a little more time... me.. it took 5 months.. lol
oh yeah.. peeing alot... and tiredness too.. above me is right:)
2006-11-02 10:27:11
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answer #8
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answered by angel_3 2
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Tender boobs more sleepy U go pee alot more and you get sick!! sometimes people get sick but not all!!!!!
2006-11-02 10:27:01
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answer #9
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answered by alizaboo19 1
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sore breasts and wierd cramps
2006-11-02 10:35:27
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answer #10
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answered by Victoria 6
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