We work hard to share our most timely and active conversations with you. We keep them up because there are a ton of great conversations here and we believe you deserve to see them all. We strive to provide you with a high quality community experience. If you feel a message or content violates these standards and would like to request its removal please submit the following information and our moderating team will respond shortly. The educational health content on What To Expect is reviewed by our medical review board and team of experts to be up-to-date and in line with the latest evidence-based medical information and accepted health guidelines, including the medically reviewed What to Expect books by Heidi Murkoff.
This educational content is not medical or diagnostic advice. Use of this site is subject to our terms of use and privacy policy. Registry Builder New. Posting as. Trying to Conceive. Community Guidelines Community Glossary. The views expressed in community are solely the opinions of participants, and do not reflect those of What to Expect. Learn more about our guidelines Just so you know, What to Expect may make commissions on shopping links on this page.
This discussion is archived and locked for posting. Archived discussions are usually a bit older and not as active as other community content. Im starting to be worried a little i know right, here we all are TTC and im "worried" seriously girls, 3 days positive OPK what do you think that means?
Is it normal for LH to go up and down? What time of day is LH highest? What are the symptoms of LH surge? Can you have a low LH surge and still ovulate? Why do I keep getting high fertility but no peak? Why does ovulation test keep saying negative? Can you get pregnant even if ovulation test negative? Can 2 lines on a ovulation test mean your pregnant? Why is my ovulation test always positive?
Previous Article Can I do cyber security with a computer science degree? These are the daily test results from a 34 year old woman who had a Liletta IUD for two years before TTC and experienced mild premature ovarian failure. You can see the darkest line is on Day 16; however, it is not as dark as the control line. These are daily results from a 22 year old woman with a regular 33 day cycle who tested once a day, first thing in the morning. None of these are a positive result, so she should continue testing until the test line is as dark as the control line.
These are test results from a year old woman with an irregular cycle who tested every morning starting on cycle day On day 15, she captured her baseline results and tested each morning 8 am until an LH peak or surge was present. On cycle day 20 she found an LH peak and tested twice to confirm, once in the am and once in the pm.
Combining ovulation test results with other tracking methods, like basal body temperature monitoring can help confirm ovulation.
As you can see, menstrual cycles are different from person to person—and also from month to month. Ovulation tests are a useful tool to inform and educate you on your journey to parenthood; they help you get to know your body and its variations, so that you can identify the time when you're most likely to conceive. To read more about finding your fertile window and tracking ovulation, check out our other articles related to ovulation.
In fact, we almost always have a small amount of luteinizing hormone in our urine. This is why the test comes with a control line. It will continue to test positive throughout the surge. You can stop testing after the first initial positive. Read all package instructions. Make sure the test line is as dark as, or even darker than the control line.
You can also double-check your fertility window by tracking your basal body temperature and cervical mucus consistency. While a few days of positive OPKs are nothing to worry about, there can be some conditions that lead to your test incorrectly detecting the LH surges that trigger ovulation.
0コメント