Of course not! Firstly not all women experience breast tenderness or morning sickness. And secondly you need to give it a chance! You will probably find that all those yucky symptoms start developing in a week or so! Good luck! Having no pregnancy symptoms that early on is normal and they usually kick in around 7 or 8 weeks when your hormone levels are climbing, these will level off around 12 or 13 weeks and you may notice you feel better. If you still don't get any symptoms and are worried call your doctor so they can do an ultrasound to make sure everything is fine. Only about 50% of women experience morning sickness so don't let this be a identifier for you for a healthy pregnancy.
no breast tenderness has nothing to do with with miscarriage---not all women gets pregnancy symptoms---
Most likely by the symptoms we have today: morning sickness, slightly bulging stomach, breast tenderness, etc.
Pregnant women usually will first realize they are pregnant when they miss their period. Other symptoms include tenderness in the breasts and morning sickness.
You really need to take a pregnancy test. But sometimes a missed period, morning sickness, breast tenderness and sometimes mood swings. But you should really get a pregnancy test done.
Even a faint positive is a positive. And false positives are very rare. You are pregnant.
== == The sure sign of pregnancy, other than the production of a baby approximately nine months following sexual intercourse, is a positive pregnancy test. A pregnancy test may register a false negative, but never a false positive. The best confirmation of pregnancy is a blood test confirming increased levels of HGC. Because no two female human beings are identical, each person has different degrees and severity of symptomolgy of pregnancy such as morning sickness, cessation of menstrual periods, breast swelling and tenderness, etc. a woman should see a physician or health care provider as soon as pregnancy is suspected.
Yes, it is very possible; signs of pregnancy are completely individual. Some women will have all or most of the typical symptoms of pregnancy (morning sickness, breast tenderness, added weight, hormonal imbalances, etc.) while some women will experience little to no symptoms at all. If you have any doubt about being pregnant, take a home pregnancy test and, if positive, follow up with your family practitioner or ObGyn.
Many women do not have sickness. Once you get the sickness in one pregnancy, you are likely to get in next pregnancy. It will normally go away after three months of pregnancy.
morning sickness
Typically your first symptom would be a missed period, and you can take a pregnancy test from two weeks after you last had sex. More obvious pregnancy symptoms like morning sickness or breast tenderness usually don't start to kick-in until around 6-8 weeks into pregnancy, but not everyone gets such symptoms.
Approximately 75% of pregnant women have some degree of morning sickness in early pregnancy.
Yes you could, but you would have very little or no symptoms yet. You may start getting some morning sickness in another week or two but breast tenderness often accompanies your menstrual cycle so that isn't a good gauge for pregnancy.