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Ovulation Test FAQ

Ovulation Tests - or Ovulation Predictor Kits - allow you to predict, with great accuracy, your most fertile time of the month. Easy to use, OPKs can greatly increase your chances of becoming pregnant - if you use them correctly. Let our Ovulation Test FAQ help you enhance your predictive success!
(Editor's Note: Join our online community to discuss ovulation testing, or click here to purchase ovulation tests with free shipping.)
If used correctly, ovulation tests are excellent predictors of ovulation. However, in order to detect the LH surge with accuracy, directions must be followed exactly. The most common mistake made with OPKs is generalizing the methods of pregnancy testing to ovulation testing - which leads to errors in use and in the interpretation of results. To get the most out of ovulation testing, read our Ovulation Test FAQ.
Ovulation Test FAQ
Q: How do ovulation tests work?
ovulation test FAQ Ovulation tests detect luteinizing hormone (LH). Just prior to ovulation, women experience a brief surge in luteinizing hormone. Ovulation predictor kits help you pinpoint this surge and anticipate ovulation - your most fertile period in your cycle. Luteinizing hormone, in elevated amounts, is actually the hormone that causes you to ovulate (when the eggs bursts from the ovarian follicle), so that is why lh tests are so effective in anticipating your most fertile time.
Q: How do I interpret results? The same as pregnancy tests?
Ovulation tests function differently than hCG pregnancy tests. A positive result (indicating an LH Surge) is indicated by a test band that is of equal or greater intensity (equal or darker) than the control band. A negative result for the LH Surge is indicated when the test band is of lesser intensity (lighter) than the control band or cannot be seen. Click here to see diagrams of test results.
Q: What is the best time of day to take the ovulation test?
ovulation test FAQ Unlike pregnancy tests, morning (first morning urine) is not the best time to collect samples for ovulation tests, as LH is synthesized in your body early in the morning and will not appear in your urine until the afternoon. The ideal time to test is in the afternoon, around 2pm, though testing may safely take place from 10am to early evening.
Q: Should I take the test the same time every day?
ovulation test FAQ Yes, be sure to test at the same time each day. Also, reduce your liquid intake around 2 hours before testing as a diluted liquid sample can prevent or hinder LH detection.
Q: When should I beginning testing with the ovulation predictor kit?
ovulation test FAQ To determine when to start testing, you must first determine the length of your menstrual cycle. The length of the menstrual cycle is the number of days from the first day of menstrual bleeding to the day before bleeding begins on the next period. Determine the usual length of the menstrual cycle over the last few months. Then, refer to the Cycle Chart to determine on which day of the menstrual cycle to begin testing. Click Here determine when to begin testing?
Q: How long after my LH surge will ovulation take place?
ovulation test FAQ Generally, ovulation will take place 12-48 hours after the LH surge is first detected (using afternoon urine samples), though 36 hours is considered to be the average length of time following the LH surge.
Q: When I get a positive on an ovulation test, when is the best time to have intercourse?
ovulation test FAQ To increase the chance of conception, it is best to have intercourse the day of the LH surge as well as following three days after.

Q: Does the appearance of faint 'test band' indicate an LH surge? ovulation test FAQ A faint line (or a faint positive test band) does not indicate a positive result for an LH surge. While the presence of a faint line on a pregnancy test may indicate a positive result, a faint line on an OPK is always negative.

Q: Does taking my basal body temperature tell me the same thing as an OPK? ovulation test FAQ Basal Body Temperature only tells of your LH surge after it is over. That is why the BBT method cannot predict the LH surge. Ovulation tests will tell you - with pinpoint accuracy - when your chances for conception are greatest. Q: Can OPKs be used as contraception devices? ovulation test FAQ Ovulation tests are designed to help facilitate pregnancy. They are not recommended for contraception. Q: Can clomid interfere with test results or cause false positives? ovulation test FAQ Clomid may cause false positives if you test for ovulation too early in your cycle. Please consult with your doctor about how to use OPKs in conjunction with Clomid - or other fertility and prescription drugs. Q: Does a light test line and a dark control line indicate a positive result? ovulation test FAQ Ovulation tests are unlike pregnancy tests - especially when it comes to interpreting results. The results are only positive if the test line is equal to or darker than the control line. Q: I had a positive result yesterday and today. Does that mean there is something wrong? ovulation test FAQ Such results may indicate that your the tests detected the LH Surge on the way up and again on the way down. Q: What if I experience a BBT thermal shift but the ovulation tests failed to detect my LH Surge? ovulation test FAQ It is possible to miss the surge. If you have a test line that is fairly dark one day then very light the next, you may have missed the actual surge. If your thermal shift occurs, you probably ovulated. It may be a good idea to test twice a day when you feel that you are close to ovulating. Another possibility is that you didn't hold your urine long enough (resulting in a diluted sample). See Also: > How do OPKs work? > How do I interpret ovulation test results?

Comments

my opk was positive on 11 th day of my cycle .... do i need to repeat the test once it come positive and if yes then how long i have to repeat it??????

Anonymous - Jul 28, 2009
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I have been doing my testing in the morning and it seems to be just fine, the lines were faint and progressed to darker lines. I didn't realize it was better to do in the afternoon, the box didn't say. I'm nervous about the afternoon b/c I drink so much water, should I still try to do the test in the afternoon? I tried one today in the afternoon and the line was faint but this morning was darker not as dark as the line reference line but I feel tomorrow or later today it would be.

Anonymous - Jul 17, 2009
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Ive been off the depo prava injection 7 months now and although i am having periods they are not regular. I brought some ovulation kits and it came back positive on monday and tuesday now showing negative. Could i really have ovulated? I have no idea when my next period will come so cant work out dates etc Sad

Anonymous - Jul 17, 2009
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My OPK was positive on sunday, I had intercourse on monday but my discharge was thick and white not the thin egg white texture associated with ovualtion. Did I miss my ovualtion window that quickly?
TX

Anonymous - Jul 07, 2009
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In what way does pregnancy effect the ovulation test? Will the ovulation test, then always read positive? I read that pregnancy can effect the tests.
Also, how soon after becoming pregnant would the tests start becoming affected? Will it happen immediately after conception, or not for a few weeks, etc???

Anonymous - Jul 04, 2009
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First Day of Last Period:
Cycle Length:
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Luteal Phase Length:
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Ovulation:
Due Date:
Fetal Age:

Note that you are most likely to get pregnant if you time your lovemaking to occur on the days right before - and on - your ovulation date. Keep in mind that the projected ovulation date above is simply a “best guess” estimate based on your cycle date information. The most accurate way to pinpoint your most fertile time is through the use of urine-based ovulation tests or with a fertility monitor. We have partnered with Early-Pregnancy-Tests.com, the Internet’s leading supplier of preconception products since 2001, to offer low-cost, FDA-approved pregnancy and ovulation tests – with free same-day shipping.

 

Now that you’ve calculated your ovulation date using our ovulation calculator, we have a number of other helpful tools you can use to help increase your chances of conceiving.

 

  • Create your own personalized ovulation calendar! You can even provide an email address so that you receive email alerts of your most fertile days, when you can begin testing for pregnancy, and more.
     

  • Create your own personalized fertility chart! This is a highly accurate way to pinpoint your ovulation date that relies primarily on basal temperature charting. (Visit Early-Pregnancy-Tests.com for an accurate, inexpensive basal thermometer.)
     

  • Connect with others at our online community! If you have questions about trying-to-conceive – or if you just want to vent a bit – we have a wonderful, vibrant community of people who’d just love to hear from you.

Find your most fertile time.
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