There is only a 1% change of a pregnancy ultrasound being wrong. If you've taken a pregnancy test and then go in for an ultra sound to confirm the pregnancy, chances are you are definitely pregnant.
There is a thirty per cent chance that they are wrong.
did you mean to say "negative"?
Most likely not, it's hard to see something that is SOOO small.. if you have another ultrasound in a couple weeks, chances are you'll see something! Good luck ~pawsalmighty
It's possible that it can be wrong, if you look on the box it usually says 99.9% accurate. That's not 100% so there is a chance it could be wrong, but the chances of it being wrong are very rare.
Yes it can be bad if the Dr. can't see you are pregnancy so. I think the Dr. can an need to do a ultsound on the who is pregnancy.
Yes. When I was pregnant with my daughter I took 2 urine tests and a blood pregnancy test all through my doctor's office and they were all negative. I was told I had polycystic ovarian syndrome. The only way I found out I was pregnant was via ultrasound.
the chances of something going wrong with your plane is about 1 to 11%
Well, the baby can get a sex change when they get older. Or it is possible the ultrasound was wrong and it was a girl instead of a boy, or a boy instead of a girl.
a negative pregnancy test can be wrong because it could have misditected, a positive pregnany can't be wrong though.
Many of the signs related to pregnancy (frequent urination, tender breasts, exhaustion) can be experienced for a variety of reasons, specifically premenstrual syndrome. The only definitive way to confirm that you are pregnant is to take a home pregnancy test and have the results confirmed by your doctor (via blood test, pelvic exam, and/or Doppler ultrasound.) If you have had a positive pregnancy test and experience vaginal bleeding, contact your ob/gyn immediately. You may be experiencing a miscarriage (spontaneous abortion) or other bleeding related to implantation or early pregnancy.
Normally a fetus heartbeat is not heard until 10-12 weeks with a doplar ultrasound device. With a stethoscope somewhere around the 17-18 weeks. 6 weeks is very early to be detecting a heartbeat! Good Luck!
No the ultrasound is usually right, it's called a miss miscarriage I think.