Q: How conception occurs?

Posted Tuesday, September 18, 2007 3:06 PM

Q: This is going to sound like a dumb question, but how does conception actually occur? I don't understand why doctors start counting the number of weeks pregnant from the last period. Doesn't ovulation happen after that? 

A: You're right -- ovulation occurs about two weeks after the start of your period (the first day of your menstrual cycle). If the stars align, that's when conception happens too. Typically, one of your ovaries releases an egg 12 to 16 days after your cycle begins. It then travels from the ovary through the fallopian tube toward the uterus. But it only lives about 24 hours, so it must meet up with a sperm during that time to make a baby. Each ejaculation contains 30 to 300 million sperm cells (which can live in a woman?s body for up to 72 hours), but it only takes one to fertilize the egg.

However, those millions of swimmers encounter some obstacles along the way. The vagina is an acidic environment that's tough on sperm, and cervical mucus also forms a pretty effective roadblock -- though it thins out on the most fertile days of the cycle. Throw in the long distance from cervix, through uterus, to fallopian tube and it's a pretty rough journey. If the sperm and egg do meet, the sperm must burrow into the egg's outer coating. Once the genetic material starts to combine, you've got yourself an embryo. The embryo then travels back down into the uterus and implants itself in the wall, and congratulations -- you're pregnant!

The reason for the two bonus weeks of pregnancy? Your doctor can't be sure exactly when you ovulated, but she can be sure of the date your cycle started, so she counts from then.

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Posted by Nest Paula
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Comments

re: Q: how do i know what day I conceived?

unk

Posted by mandybride05    Monday, November 05, 2007 1:46 PM


re: Q: How Conception Occurs?

My husband and I aren't really TTC but I went off of BC 1 month ago and a few days ago we didn't use any precautions while being intimate.  My cycle started the next night which was exactly 28 days from the first day of my last cycle.  Is is possible to get pregnant right before your cycle is supposed to start? And if you do get your cycle does that definitely mean that you are not pregnant?

Posted by Mrs Michael Gamache    Monday, February 11, 2008 2:23 PM


re: Q: How Conception Occurs?

Although I have heard of people continuing to have their cycle throughout their  pregnancy's, It's very rare. The reason is because when you cycle you are "sloughing"  off the lining of your uterus where your baby (or technically the embryo) implants itself.

Posted by BirthDoula2B    Sunday, April 20, 2008 11:02 PM


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