Yes. Your baby was on his/her way before April 11. If you're 6 weeks pregnant, you conceived around 4 wks ago (doctors start counting weeks from your last period). BUT it still isn't April 24...
Wht r u asking? exactly
It is not recommended or ethical to try to make a pregnancy test positive if you are not actually pregnant. Doing so can lead to misinformation and potentially harmful consequences. It is important to take a pregnancy test honestly and accurately to determine your true pregnancy status.
Yes. In a phantom pregnancy, the body is tricked into feeling like it is pregnant. Consequently the same hormones present in a real pregnancy will be present in the body of someone who is undergoing a phantom pregnancy, and these hormones are what a pregnancy test detects.
only if you take someone else's pee that is pregnant then yes but other wise no.
Generally done by palpation. Vet or someone trained on the procedure does a rectal exam to feel for the fetus. Ultrasound is can also be used
Big Fat Positive generally means the confirmation that someone is pregnant. It is thought to refer to getting a positive pregnancy test result either at home or at the doctor's surgery.
Yes, it can. One reason is that you took the test too soon before the hormones have kicked in. It takes about a month after the first missed period before there are enough hormones to have the test correctly report the results.
yes u can
the positive answer on the tests are very rarely wrong, HCG is the hormone produced when someone is pregnant, which is what shows up on the test and is not there to detect by urine tests when someone is not pregnant. although there are some medications etc that can affect the reliability of the test.
Absolutely - all blood types can have children together. The only problem relating to these blood types for pregnancy would be if the mother is negative and her first child was positive. Then there may be a problem if her second child is also positive.
Home pregnancy tests can have poor accuracy. Also, they expire. Go to your doctor so that you can receive an accurate test and prenatal care if you are pregnant.
There are no "compatability" problems when thinking about having a baby with someone of a different blood type. If the mother is Rh negative, which you don't list, then she may need an injection during the pregnancy to protect the health of future pregnancies.