Yes. Most commonly when you are pregnant and take a home pregnancy test it shows up fairly quick. Especially if you are far enough along that your hormone levels are already pretty high.
A pregnancy test WILL NOT tell you if you are pregnant immediately after having intercourse unless you've had intercourse within the last nine months (on another occasion) and you are already pregnant.
She's pregnant if the test shows positive
the pregnancy could be a false positive
Yes, home pregnancy tests can produce both false positives and false negatives. If a home pregnancy test is positive, you should see a gynecologist to have the pregnancy confirmed as soon as you can.
I had IVF with 6d blasts and was feeling pregnant within a month, but tested (otc test) positive with twins within a week... (currently 32 weeks) You may not feel anything right away. But your beta will confirm :) Good luck!!!!
You read the instructions on the box. It says right there what the test will look like of it's positive. It differs between brands.
I'm not a doctor, but I sincerely have to say "not good". The fact that both pregnancy tests say positive, as long as you did them right, then your mathematical chances are all but 100%.
You should take a test now if you are almost 2 months late. A pregnancy test usually shows positive if you are pregnant right after your period is missed.
yes but one is wrong and one is right so you may want to go to the doctor
Well, since there's really no false positive tests, if your cramping and bleeding either like a normal cycle or moreso then it might be that your body is trying to reject the pregnancy and you may be miscarrying (it's what happened in my first pregnancy as well as with my SIL's ectopic pregnancy). I would see a doctor right away just to be safe.
a blood test ordered by your MD is way more accurate than in-home pregnancy tests.
On the box it will tell you at how many days it will detect pregnancy. You were probably right at the line on the first day, and the second your body had produced enough of the hormones to show up positive on a titer test.