Pregnancy tests

Certainty in 15 minutes: tests are this safe

Hooray, your period has stopped! Now, of course, you want to know if it really worked and you will soon be able to hold your baby in your arms. What you need is a pregnancy test. But are the products from the drugstore really safe – or should you go to the pharmacy? Or go straight to the doctor?

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Pregnancy tests work regardless of price

Before you get your doctor involved, you should first find out for yourself if you are pregnant. If this is the case, your doctor can confirm the result later. So the first step is always the self-test. And it doesn’t matter whether you choose a cheap product from the drugstore or the premium version from the pharmacy. All commercially available pregnancy tests are based on the same principle – and are therefore all equally safe. However, the prerequisite is that you use the pregnancy tests correctly: Not too early and exactly as described on the package insert.

How does the test detect pregnancy?

Every commercially available pregnancy test is designed to measure the pregnancy hormone HCG in urine. The abbreviation stands for Human Chorionic Gonadotropin, a hormone produced by the female body exclusively during pregnancy. It can be detected for the first time about one week after fertilization of the egg. The HCG concentration doubles every two days and reaches its maximum value between the 8th and 12th week of pregnancy. So the later you test, the higher the HCG concentration in your urine and the more likely you are to be pregnant.

What types of test are available?

All available pregnancy test models differ only in one point: the sensitivity of their measurement. So-called early tests react to even the smallest amounts of the HCG hormone in the urine, while the classic tests only react when the hormone level is somewhat higher. As a rule of thumb, the lower the mIU/ml value (milli International Units per milliliter) indicated on the package, the more sensitive the test. For an early test this value is around 10, for a conventional pregnancy test around 25 mIU/ml. However, testing too early is not advisable. It is true that manufacturers advertise that early testing is possible as early as the 5th day before the calculated start of your period. But if you have accidentally miscalculated the day of your ovulation or your cycle was not reliable, the HCG production may be delayed. As a result, the test does not work. The result of any early test should therefore always be checked a few days later with a classic pregnancy test. That way you are really on the safe side.

How to Grow a Baby and Push It Out

The ultimate guide to pregnancy and birth straight from the midwife's mouth: Your no-nonsense guide to pregnancy and birth.

€17,07

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How to use the pregnancy test

You hold the strip from the package directly into the urine stream for about 15 seconds. Pregnancy tests in which the urine is collected in a measuring cup beforehand are hardly available on the market any more – the risk of falsifying the result due to residues or bacterial contamination in the collecting cup is too great. You close the test strip with the enclosed plastic cap and place it horizontally on a paper towel. Within 15 minutes you have certainty and know whether you are pregnant or not.
Here is a selection of pregnancy tests:
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Clearblue Ovulation test

Digital ovulation test kit with 1 digital holder and 20 ovulation tests.

€49,07

super product

The Impatient Woman's Guide to Getting Pregnant

Comforting and intimate, this "girlfriend" guide to getting pregnant gets to the heart of all the emotional issues around having children.

€ 10,99

super product

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