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Can you get pregnant two days after you have your period? When do you start ovulating after your period.?
I had sex about two days after my period and my fiance came in me is there a possibility that I am pregnant?
9 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavorite Answer
I disagree with some of the earlier comments. There is actually a very small window of opportunity to become pregnant. An egg can only survive 48 hours. And eggs are only released once per cycle (average cycle is 28 days, 13 cycles per year). So, on average, we women are only fertile 26 days of the year. To fall pregnant, naturally sperm needs to be in good supply on these days.
In answer to your question:
The first day of your period is Day 1 of your cycle. Your period starts 14 days after ovulation, so in a 28 day cycle, this means you would have ovulated on Day 14 (in a 35 day cycle, you would have ovulated on Day 21 etc). Sperm can survive up to 5 days waiting for an egg to fertilise, so if you ovulate on Day 14, it is possible you could become pregnant from Day 9-15. Hope this helps and Best of Luck!
Source(s): Mum of 4-month old baby boy - 1 decade ago
ovulation is generally in the middle to the end of the cycle.
so maybe 2 weeks after your last period?
- Anonymous1 decade ago
The first day of your cycle, is the first day of your period. So if your period is 5 days (which is average) you had sex on day 7. The average "28 day cycle woman" ovulates on day 14-16. The prime time to get prego is day 10-15. But, if you had unprotected sex, you can get pregnant! Sperm can survive for up to 7 days. It's a possibility, but unlikely.
- 1 decade ago
Yes, you can. You can pretty much ALWAYS get pregnant unless you already are pregnant, or don't have a uterus.
See a doctor and be more careful next time.
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- marieLv 71 decade ago
Yes because you can get pregnant from sex, (hello?) You can get pregnant any time of the month. You ovulate in the middle between cycles but the two ovaries alternate and they are not always perfectly in sync.
- 1 decade ago
...Damn...even im a guy and i know the answer to this. WHen ure pregnant ure period just stops nd ull know it...damn nobody ever taught u that. Imma guy and i know that.
Sorry i just felt that this should be blatant for a female.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Read everything on this site:
www.babycentre.com.au
it should tell about the whole process.
Inside the woman's body: how an egg is hatched
For women, the possibility of pregnancy begins in the ovaries; those two small oval organs attached to either side of your uterus (womb). The ovaries are packed with eggs, which are made before you are even born. Every baby girl is born with up to 450,000 eggs in her ovaries. Many eggs begin dying off almost immediately and the rest steadily decrease in number as you get older. You'll probably release about 400 eggs, during your fertile years. This begins with your first period and ends when the menopause arrives, usually between the ages of 45 and 55.
Each month, usually some time during the middle of your menstrual cycle, between one and three eggs start to reach maturity in one of your ovaries. The ripest egg is then released and is quickly sucked up by the tulip-shaped opening of the nearest fallopian tube (these are two four-inch canals leading from the ovaries to the uterus). This release is known as ovulation. The exact time of ovulation depends on the length of your cycle. In an average 28 day cycle, ovulation will most likely happen between the 12th and 15th days, counting day 1 as the first day of your last period. The length of your cycle, the ripening of your eggs and the timing of ovulation are controlled by several different hormones, which work together. See our article on your menstrual cycle for more about hormones.
The average egg lives and can be fertilised for about 12 to 24 hours after release, so it has to meet up with a sperm soon if a baby is to be conceived. If your egg does meet up with a healthy sperm on its way to the uterus, the two can join and begin the process of creating a new life. If not, it ends its journey at the uterus, where it disintegrates. When you have not conceived, the ovary stops making oestrogen and progesterone, the two hormones that would help maintain a pregnancy. Following the drop in the levels of these hormones, the thickened lining of your uterus is shed, along with the disintegrated egg, during your period.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
probably not