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Welcome To Week 3
Your Baby: How Old Is Your Baby
When conception takes place, it happens midway in your
menstrual cycle or at approximately 2 weeks. When you
calculate your due date, that 2 weeks is counted in
the calculation, therefore your estimated due date will
span 40 weeks (dating back to your last period), instead
of the 38 weeks since conception.
Your Body: The ABCs Of Conception
Some women have no idea they've conceived at this early
date, while others can tell the exact moment it happened.
Either way, conception is a magical moment for a couple,
especially a woman, whose body is going to grow and
change in ways never thought possible.
If you're curious about conception, here's what you
need to know in a nutshell. During ovulation, which
usually happens mid-cycle (on day 14 of a 28-day cycle),
one of your eggs is carried into the nearest Fallopian
tube. If a man's sperm makes its way to the same spot
within the next 12 to 24 hours, it may fertilize that
egg. You're not actually pregnant until the fertilized
ovum, called a zygote, travels the rest of the way down
the Fallopian tube and attaches itself to the wall of
your uterus.
The catch: The average egg lives only 24 hours and
the average sperm lives for 24 to 48 hours, so they
have to get acquainted during the first few hours after
sex if you're going to conceive. The moral of the story:
If your goal is to get pregnant, you should aim to make
love at least every other day during the middle of your
cycle.
On That Note: Getting Graphic
The Female
Reproductive System Tour shows just how far a woman's
egg and a man's sperm have to travel before they actually
meet up and connect to conceive a baby.
Weekly Tip
It might be a few more weeks until you miss a period
- or notice one of the other signs of pregnancy -- and
suspect that you're pregnant. So have a home pregnancy
test on hand, but hold off using it until four to seven
days after you would expect your period to begin. Waiting
it out will help ensure that you get the right results.
Review Date: July 23, 2001
Reviewed By: Victoria Kennedy, RN, A.D.A.M. editorial.
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