Yes, you have to give the hormones time to build up
Yes it can. My advice to you is if you feel that you really are pregnant, buy several test, and if they are all negative and you STILL think you're are pregnant, go to the Dr. and get him to test you.
It is possible. I suggest going to see the doctor about this. Or, you could take a pregnancy test.
Pcos would make it very hard for you to get pregnant but NOT IMPOSSIBLE. If you had negative urine and blood tests it could be you are testing too early. Wait a week or two and tes yourself again. Again would be unlikely but not impossible.
It's possible to have a period and still be pregnant
You may be pregnant but took the test too early or its a false negative. A blood type is most accurate.
If an hCG test comes back positive, it means the person is pregnant. If it comes back negative, the person is probably not pregnant, but it could be a false-negative if testing was done too soon.
Yes. You could be testing too early.
I am sorry but it could have been an early miscarriage. I also had one, and found out in nearly 50% of early pregnancies they end in miscarriage, and many times before the women even knows she is pregnant.
No. The only thing that will cause a false negative on a HPT is testing too early. See your DR for a blood test.
A pregnancy that ends so early so as to be described as "vanishing twin syndrome" does not present a risk of Rh sensitization. This is why in many parts of the developed world, Anti-Rho(d) type products aren't given for early pregnancy losses or early terminations in Rh negative women.
Anything is possible, but there's no way we would bet our future on it.
There are a few possible answers: The train rarely arrives early. The train usually arrives late. The train usually leaves late. The train rarely leaves early.
There is a very small possibility. A blood test is the most accurate method of testing for pregnancy. It could be possible that you took and went in for a blood pregnancy test too early to detect the hormone, hCG. Home pregnancy tests can usually detect the hormone 7-14 days (depending on the sensitivity of the test) after conception, while a blood test can detect the hormone 7-12 days. A good way to be sure is to wait to see if you miss your next period, or wait 2 more weeks to retake the tests.