Home Pregnancy Tests

When a pregnancy is suspected many women choose to test for pregnancy in the privacy of their own home. This method of pregnancy testing is more convenient and less expensive than a urine or blood test at the obstetrician’s office.

There are two types of home pregnancy tests available for use. One is the regular home pregnancy test with the result given as one or two lines. The other type of home pregnancy test is a digital test that actually reads “pregnant” or “not pregnant”. There are two brands of digital tests: Clearblue Easy Digital and e.p.t. Certainty.

Home pregnancy tests work by detecting the presence of the pregnancy hormone Human chorionic gonadotropin (Hcg). In the non-pregnant female, this hormone is usually below 5 mIU/ml. Most home pregnancy tests will detect an Hcg level of <25 miu>

If a home pregnancy test that detects only higher levels of Hcg is used before the levels of Hcg in the body reach the test’s sensitivity, a false negative can occur. When a false negative occurs a woman might assume the test is correct only to find out days later that she is, indeed, pregnant. False positives rarely occur on tests that are used within the expiration date. When a false positive does occur it could be that the women experienced an early miscarriage or a chemical pregnancy.

If a home pregnancy test is read after the allotted time has elapsed there is a chance that it will show an evaporation line. An evaporation line is a grayish line that appears in the place where the positive line would be if the woman was pregnant. Sometimes evaporation lines are mistaken for positives and that is why a home pregnancy test should never be read after the time stated in the instructions.

There are many different brands of generic home pregnancy tests on the market. All home pregnancy tests are the same with the exception of design and the amount of Hcg to which they will respond. In my personal experience, tests from the dollar store work just as well as the more expensive brand name tests found at the drug store. The key to getting a correct answer on a home pregnancy test is to know what level of Hcg the test detects and at what day of a normal pregnancy the level of Hcg reaches that number. This information can be found here: http://www.peeonastick.com/hpts.html and here: http://www.bobrow.net/kimberly/birth/hcglevels.html.

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