Discharge seen 1 - 3 days following intercourse, is a combination of both vaginal fluid and semen. As semen contains fructose, it emits a sweetish odour. When vaginal fluids, which are acidic, combines with semen, the discharge can become sticky and smell slightly offensive. Bear in mind, that the sperm cells are living cells and will die and break down, so the odour will become stronger as the days pass and while the discharge from the uterine area and upper vaginal cavity continues to pass out. The method of douching with warm water will flush excess semen and vaginal fluids out following intercourse, but the semen that is deposited high up in the vagina, will pass through the cervix and into the uterus, as expected, and it is this semen that gradually passes out of the body as a discharge, collecting vaginal fluids( that are secreted daily) along the way. Note also, that any bacterium, introduced via penile penetration or oral sex prior to full intercourse, will also trigger a response from the immune system and this will result in a more unpleasant odour from the discharge. Thrush is not connected to intercourse, but can be present and irritated by intercourse. A good dollop of plain yoghurt, inserted into the vaginal cavity,will ease symptoms of thrush until a health professional can be seen. It is therefore important, to maintain cleanliness wherever possible to reduce the discharge, possibility of infection or at least lessen the odour.
Only if you are trying to conceive. Most women ovulate between day 12 and day 18 - sperm can survive five days to a week after intercourse.
It is part of the cycle. Your body is ready to get pregnant and it produces the mucus to make it easy for sperm to reach the ovum.
I would say this has to do with ovulation. Around the time of ovulation (about day 10-14 on a 28 day cycle) you will find your cervical mucus is clear and you feel very "wet" in your vagina area. The cervical mucus aids conception by keeping the sperm alive. You will find this mucus is very slippery and stretchy. When you are not ovulating, your mucus will usually be white/cream colour and your vagina area will feel "dryer". This mucus is sticky rather than slippery. It is toxic to sperm. The lower back pain could have to do with ovulation. Some women have pain similar to menstrual pain while ovulating.
have sex every day especially around ovulation peek..the sperm gets to the egg faster because your discharging the mucus for the sperm to swim on..
probably. You have a lot of discharge when you are pregnant.
That's a mucus discharge from your body as it prepares to cleanse itself, it occurs in almost all women at that time.
Not actually of pregnancy but possibly of ovulation...in which case pregnancy has a good chance of occurring.
Mucus discharge is a normal part of a woman's fertility cycle. It is produced at the cervix, as an aid to, or prevention of, sperm migration and health. Occasionally the mucus will make its way out of the vagina, usually showing up in underwear or on toilet paper after wiping. Thick, cremay mucus is non-fertile mucus...it doesn't help sperm live long or travel well thru the vagina/fallopian tubes. Maybe you've noticed more stretchy, clearer mucus halfway through your cycle...this is fertile-time mucus. The consistency of it helps sperm live longer and travel in your body as an aid to conception.
No. It takes 2 weeks to get pregnant. 1 day after sex the sperm is probably still swimming towards the fallopian tube.
That all depends on what day in your cycle you are ovulating on and what day you had sex on. Check out this article to find out more information about trying to conceive: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/740849/trying_to_conceive_a_helpful_guide.html
Keep track of what day in you cycle that you ovulate. Have intercourse about 4 days before you're scheduled to ovulate, and then try to have intercourse every day, or at least a couple of more days, before you ovulate, including the day before you ovulate. It's more important to have intercourse before you ovulate than the actual day you ovulate since the sperm need to be waiting in the fallopian tubes when the egg passes through the tubes. Try having intercourse in the missionary (man on top) or with the female in the knee-chest position, these can result in the sperm being deposited farther into the vagina. Lie flat after intercourse and don't get out of bed for an hour or two afterwards. Some people believe that skipping intercourse for a couple of days improves the quality of a man's sperm, and increases the chance of getting pregnant. This isn't really true. Couples who have intercourse more frequently get pregnant more often. Even if it's the middle of the week and you're both tired, go ahead and ask your partner to have intercourse (assuming you're both on board with getting pregnant).
If sperm from intercourse met an egg which had already been released there would have been 24hrs for the pregnancy to establish. The zygote divides once every 20hr or so meaning there would be either 1, 4 or 8 cells present in the fallopian tube. A sonogram cannot pick up such small objects. Even if it could sperm from the act of intercourse could be viable for another day (48hrs in total) and so pregnancy from that act could result after the scan.