Early Signs of Pregnancy by Craig Rowe
There are several signs and symptoms of pregnancy that you may experience very
early on in your pregnancy, before your period is ever missed. Unfortunately,
these signs are not unlike the symptoms you experience before your period,
making it hard to distinguish what is really going on. Determining you are
pregnant before a missed period or before you take a pregnancy test is a bit
like putting together the pieces of a puzzle. You may or may not experience all
of the signs, but it is likely that you will experience at least one of them.
First, you may notice that your breasts are very tender. Many women experience
tender breasts and associate it with PMS, but raging hormones also cause this
when you first become pregnant. The breasts may not be tender, but they may be a
bit swollen in the first hours and days after conception. From the moment you
become pregnant your body is preparing itself for the development and birth of
your child.
You may notice that you have a general lack of energy. Many women feel very
tired early on in their pregnancy. They often attribute this tiredness to other
things that are going on in their lives, but it is often owed to pregnancy. This
fatigue is a result of changing hormones and body chemistry as well as the sheer
amount of work that a woman's body is doing when conception occurs. The best
thing you can do if you experience this is to get to bed earlier and even sleep
in later if you can!
Next, you may experience implantation bleeding. This is a very rare sign of
pregnancy, but it does happen. A few days before your menstrual cycle should
begin; you may experience a brown or slightly pink vaginal discharge. This
discharge occurs when the fertilized egg implants in the uterus. If you don't
experience the implantation bleeding it's not a sure sign that you are not
pregnant, as it is only experienced in 1/3 of all pregnancies.
Perhaps the hallmark of early pregnancy signs is nausea. This is also a symptom
that many women will blame on food poisoning or a bug that they must have caught
at work. Because the nausea usually grows gradually, being very slight the first
few days and then increasing, it's often thought to be a stomach flu or
something of the like. Nausea that doesn't subside is often the first indication
to a woman that she may be pregnant, especially if she hadn't planned the
pregnancy. Many women report that they feel achy along with the nausea; although
many doctors believe that this is simply a psychological response to the mental
preparation for one's period.
A missed period is a sure sign that there is something going on, usually
pregnancy. If you do not keep track of your periods or you do not have regular
periods this one can take awhile to catch onto, but if the nausea doesn't tip a
woman off to the fact that she is pregnant, than the missed period usually will.
About the time that the missed period and nausea set in, other women report an
increase in hunger. This is probably owed to the fact that the body is working
hard to support the development of the embryo. Other women report that they have
no appetite at all. This sign can swing either way and may vary from day to day
depending on nausea and other pregnancy symptoms. You can read about some other
less common pregnancy signs if you visit the www.pregnancysafe.com website.
Unfortunately there isn't a checklist that one can be given to determine that
she is pregnant. Every woman, in fact, every pregnancy has different symptoms.
Some women report that they had no symptoms at all, while others realize they
had all of the signs and symptoms listed here, and then some! Some times
pregnancy signs are seen in hindsight, but if you are looking for them, there is
a good chance you'll catch onto what your body is telling you long before you
use a pregnancy test!
About the Author:
Learn about the early signs of pregnancy at and tips for a healthy pregnancy
at
http://www.pregnancysafe.com
Source: This article is taken from www.goarticles.com
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