Pregnancy Symptoms Before Missed Period

Pregnancy Symptoms Before Missed Period

What are the early signs of pregnancy before a missed period? Pregnancy Symptoms Before Missed Period.


Until you have produced a positive pregnancy test, there is no way to know for sure you are expecting. But experiencing any of these early pregnancy symptoms before your period normally arrives could mean you have hit baby.

1. Tender Breasts.
Breasts are often the first body part to get the message when sperm meets egg. Some women’s breasts may feel tingly, sore, full and even painful to the touch within days of conception as estrogen levels start to rise.

2. Darkening Areolas. 
You may notice that your areolas, the circles around your nipples, darken and increase in diameter in the weeks following conception.

You may also spot tiny goose bump-like bumps on your areolas (glands that will eventually lubricate your nursing nipples). Both of these changes can only be chalked up to pregnancy.

3. Fatigue. 
With all that work that goes into baby-making, plus higher levels of pregnancy hormones, the first four months of pregnancy can leave you feeling sluggish and sleepy.

4. Nausea.
Just days after conception, you might start to get the queasies or morning sickness, due to a rush of new pregnancy hormones — although nausea is more likely to rear its ugly head four weeks later, when you’re around 6 weeks pregnant.

5. Sensitivity to smell.
Some newly pregnant women report a heightened sense of smell early on due to increased levels of estrogen.

6. Bloating.
As all women know, bloating is one of the least-loved PMS symptoms — but it can also be a sign of increased pregnancy-induced progesterone that slows down your digestive tract, trapping gas inside your intestines.

7. Urinary frequency. 
If you suddenly find that you need to pee, like, all the time, it could be an early sign of pregnancy before your period.

Your growing uterus also starts pushing on your bladder and your progesterone levels increase, resulting in a frequent need to pee during pregnancy.

8. Elevated basal body temperature (BBT).
If you have already been tracking your temperature, you know that it typically increases around the time of ovulation as progesterone levels rise; both drop when you have your period.

But if you conceive, your body temperature will remain elevated from ovulation throughout your pregnancy.

9. Cervical mucus.
If it becomes creamy and stays that way after ovulation, it is a good sign you will have a positive pregnancy test.

Keep in mind, just because you have experienced some of these symptoms does not mean you’re expecting.

You could also have none of them at all and still go on to have a perfectly healthy pregnancy.
Every woman is different, as is every pregnancy, so the only way to know you are expecting for sure is to pee on a stick.

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