Hindi movie Luck download

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Hindi movie Luck download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : Jul 24, 2009
Genre : Action Thriller
Starcast : Sanjay Dutt, Mithun Chakraborty, Danny Denzongpa, Imran Khan, Ravi Kishan, Neha Oberoi
Desc :
Luck is a story about this boy, Ram Mehra (Imran Khan), who is burdened by a lot of circumstantial problems, and reaches a point in life, where he has the capacity, but no opportunity, to come out of the mess that unfortunately life has offered him. They say luck is when opportunity knocks and you answer. Something like this happens to Ram, and as he accepts the opportunity, by chance encounters, Ram recognizes his own strengths to pull him through the difficult times that lie ahead. Only he did not know that the problems do not end, but a game of betrayal and putting his luck at test at every step starts.
Duration : 2hr 5min
Size : 149mb
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Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 76.5 MB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( .9 kB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 72.7 MB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 211.0 kB

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Hindi movie Luck download

Hindi movie Luck download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : Jul 24, 2009
Genre : Action Thriller
Starcast : Sanjay Dutt, Mithun Chakraborty, Danny Denzongpa, Imran Khan, Ravi Kishan, Neha Oberoi
Desc :
Luck is a story about this boy, Ram Mehra (Imran Khan), who is burdened by a lot of circumstantial problems, and reaches a point in life, where he has the capacity, but no opportunity, to come out of the mess that unfortunately life has offered him. They say luck is when opportunity knocks and you answer. Something like this happens to Ram, and as he accepts the opportunity, by chance encounters, Ram recognizes his own strengths to pull him through the difficult times that lie ahead. Only he did not know that the problems do not end, but a game of betrayal and putting his luck at test at every step starts.
Duration : 2hr 5min
Size : 149mb
DOWNLOAD THE MOVIE


Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 76.5 MB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( .9 kB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 72.7 MB
Luck-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 211.0 kB

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Hindi movie Love Aaj Kal download

Hindi movie Love Aaj Kal download

Source : euDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : July 31, 2009
Genre : Romance
Starcast : Saif Ali Khan,Deepika Padukone
Desc :
Love Aaj - Jai and Meera are a modern-day couple in London. They are very happy together but do not believe in tying each other down. So when life pulls them in different directions, they decide to go with the flow. “These Heer-Ranjha, Romeo-Juliet type janam janam ka saath type couples exist only in story books”, Jai says. In the real life, we have to be practical. Love Kal - Veer Singh is struck by the thunderbolt when he sees Harleen for the first time. Soon after, he stands under a tree and swears that “is janam mein aur har janam mein… yehi meri votti banegi – Harleen Kaur.” He travels a thousand kilometres by train to stand under her balcony only to have a glimpse of her face. And yet not speak a word with her. Love Aaj Kal - Veer does not understand how Jai can treat matters of the heart without passion, like a financial transaction. Jai does not understand how Veer Singh could have been so naïve and silly about Harleen in the days of his youth. But as both stories unfold, we realize that the process of relationship might be different in different eras, but the experience of being in love remains the same.
Duration : 2hrs 11min
Size : 156mb



Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 80.0 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 343.0 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 75.7 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 294.3 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 63.1 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 354.3 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 79.4 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 425.4 kB
READ MORE - Hindi movie Love Aaj Kal download

Hindi movie Love Aaj Kal download

Hindi movie Love Aaj Kal download

Source : euDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : July 31, 2009
Genre : Romance
Starcast : Saif Ali Khan,Deepika Padukone
Desc :
Love Aaj - Jai and Meera are a modern-day couple in London. They are very happy together but do not believe in tying each other down. So when life pulls them in different directions, they decide to go with the flow. “These Heer-Ranjha, Romeo-Juliet type janam janam ka saath type couples exist only in story books”, Jai says. In the real life, we have to be practical. Love Kal - Veer Singh is struck by the thunderbolt when he sees Harleen for the first time. Soon after, he stands under a tree and swears that “is janam mein aur har janam mein… yehi meri votti banegi – Harleen Kaur.” He travels a thousand kilometres by train to stand under her balcony only to have a glimpse of her face. And yet not speak a word with her. Love Aaj Kal - Veer does not understand how Jai can treat matters of the heart without passion, like a financial transaction. Jai does not understand how Veer Singh could have been so naïve and silly about Harleen in the days of his youth. But as both stories unfold, we realize that the process of relationship might be different in different eras, but the experience of being in love remains the same.
Duration : 2hrs 11min
Size : 156mb



Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 80.0 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 343.0 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 75.7 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-euDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 294.3 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 63.1 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 354.3 kB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 79.4 MB
Love.Aaj.Kal-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 425.4 kB
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Hindi movie Kaminey download

Hindi movie Kaminey download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : August 14, 2009
Genre : Action Drama
Starcast : Shahid Kapur, Priyanka Chopra, Amol Gupte
Desc :
A story about identical twins, in their early twenties, hoping to leave the squalor behind and move into a life of prosperity and dignity. But the similarity ends here. Inter cut between are the parallel stories of the brothers as they run to protect themselves, their dreams and their loves. Until a point where it converges and the brothers meet to realize that they only have each other.
Duration : 2hr 9mins
Size : 154mb



Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( .4 MB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 154.3 kB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( .6 MB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 191.8 kB
READ MORE - Hindi movie Kaminey download

Hindi movie Kaminey download

Hindi movie Kaminey download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : August 14, 2009
Genre : Action Drama
Starcast : Shahid Kapur, Priyanka Chopra, Amol Gupte
Desc :
A story about identical twins, in their early twenties, hoping to leave the squalor behind and move into a life of prosperity and dignity. But the similarity ends here. Inter cut between are the parallel stories of the brothers as they run to protect themselves, their dreams and their loves. Until a point where it converges and the brothers meet to realize that they only have each other.
Duration : 2hr 9mins
Size : 154mb



Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( .4 MB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( 154.3 kB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( .6 MB
Kaminey-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( 191.8 kB
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Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : Aug 28, 2009
Genre : Comedy
Starcast : Sunil Shetty, Aarti Chabaria, Aashish Chowdhry, Tulip Joshi, Aaftab Shivdasani, Javed Jaffrey, Kim Sharma
Desc :
So, what can happen at a funeral? Even, if it`s the funeral of Daddy Cool Douglas Lazarus? It`s in Goa, tears, sad speeches, melancholia... right? Wrong! When... The coffin makers deliver the wrong body. The huge family extends to mostly freaky characters, including the deceased`s sons, a real estate agent, wheelchair-bound Uncle Murphy, and a blackmailer. So what happens is a complete melange of madness, chaos, and a laugh a minute! So is it a `fun`eral? Or should we say the fun is real?
Duration : 1hr 42min
Size : 122mb

DOWNLOAD THE MOVIE


Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 58.6 MB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( .3 kB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 63.0 MB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( .8 kB
READ MORE - Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Source : pDVD


MOVIE INFO

Released : Aug 28, 2009
Genre : Comedy
Starcast : Sunil Shetty, Aarti Chabaria, Aashish Chowdhry, Tulip Joshi, Aaftab Shivdasani, Javed Jaffrey, Kim Sharma
Desc :
So, what can happen at a funeral? Even, if it`s the funeral of Daddy Cool Douglas Lazarus? It`s in Goa, tears, sad speeches, melancholia... right? Wrong! When... The coffin makers deliver the wrong body. The huge family extends to mostly freaky characters, including the deceased`s sons, a real estate agent, wheelchair-bound Uncle Murphy, and a blackmailer. So what happens is a complete melange of madness, chaos, and a laugh a minute! So is it a `fun`eral? Or should we say the fun is real?
Duration : 1hr 42min
Size : 122mb

DOWNLOAD THE MOVIE


Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-1.avi ( 58.6 MB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-1.jpg ( .3 kB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-2.avi ( 63.0 MB
Daddy.Cool-pDVD-AHMAD-2.jpg ( .8 kB
READ MORE - Hindi movie Daddy Cool download

Pregnancy test

Pregnancy test


A modern pregnancy test

A pregnancy test attempts to determine whether or not a woman is pregnant. Records of attempts at pregnancy testing have been found as far back as the ancient Greek and ancient Egyptian cultures. Modern pregnancy tests look for chemical markers associated with pregnancy. These markers are found in urine and blood, and pregnancy tests require sampling one of these substances. The first of these markers to be discovered, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), was discovered in 1930 to be produced by the trophoblast cells of the fertilised ovum (blastocyst). While hCG is a reliable marker of pregnancy, it cannot be detected until after implantation:[1] this results in false negatives if the test is performed during the very early stages of pregnancy. Obstetric ultrasonography may also be used to detect pregnancy. Obstetric ultrasonography was first practiced in the 1960s; the first home test kit for hCG was released in the mid-1970s.


History


Jan Steen's The Doctor's Visit. Included in this 17th century painting is a depiction of a dubious pregnancy test: a ribbon dipped in the patient's urine and then burned.[2]

The ancient Egyptians watered bags of wheat and barley with the urine of a possibly pregnant woman. Germination indicated pregnancy. The type of grain that sprouted was taken as an indicator of the fetus's sex. Hippocrates suggested that a woman who had missed her period should drink a solution of honey in water at bedtime: resulting abdominal distention and cramps would indicate the presence of a pregnancy. Avicenna and many physicians after him in the Middle Ages performed uroscopy, a nonscientific method to evaluate urine.

Selmar Aschheim and Bernhard Zondek introduced testing based on the presence of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in 1928.[3] Early studies of hCG had concluded that it was produced by the pituitary gland. In the 1930s, Georgeanna Jones discovered that hCG was produced not by the pituitary gland, but by the placenta. This discovery was important in relying on hCG as an early marker of pregnancy.[4]In the Aschheim and Zondek test, an infantile female mouse was injected subcutaneously with urine of the person to be tested, and the mouse later was killed and dissected. Presence of ovulation indicated that the urine contained hCG and meant that the person was pregnant. A similar test was developed using immature rabbits. Here, too, killing the animal to check her ovaries was necessary. An improvement arrived with the frog test, introduced by Lancelot Hogben, which still was used in the 1950s and allowed the frog to remain alive and be used repeatedly: a female frog was injected with serum or urine of the patient; if the frog produced eggs within the next 24 hours, the test was positive.

Direct measurement of antigens, such as hCG, was made possible with the invention of the radioimmunoassay in 1959,[5]. Radioimmunoassays require sophisticated apparatus and special radiation precautions and are expensive. In the 1970s, the discovery of monoclonal antibodies led to the development of the relatively simple and cheap immunoassays, such as agglutination-inhibition-based assays and sandwich ELISA, used in modern home pregnancy tests.

Modern tests

The test for pregnancy which can give the quickest result after fertilisation is a rosette inhibition assay for early pregnancy factor (EPF). EPF can be detected in blood within 48 hours of fertilization.[6] However, testing for EPF is expensive and time-consuming.

Most chemical tests for pregnancy look for the presence of the beta subunit of hCG or human chorionic gonadotropin in the blood or urine. hCG can be detected in urine or blood after implantation, which occurs six to twelve days after fertilization.[1] Quantitative blood (serum beta) tests can detect hCG levels as low as 1 mIU/mL, while urine tests have published detection thresholds of 20 mIU/mL to 100 mIU/mL, depending on the brand.[7] Qualitative blood tests generally have a threshold of 25 mIU/mL, and so are less sensitive than some available home pregnancy tests. Most home pregnancy tests are based on lateral-flow technology.

With obstetric ultrasonography the gestational sac sometimes can be visualized as early as four and a half weeks of gestation (approximately two and a half weeks after ovulation) and the yolk sac at about five weeks' gestation. The embryo can be observed and measured by about five and a half weeks. The heartbeat may be seen as early as six weeks, and is usually visible by seven weeks' gestation.[8][9]

Accuracy


Negative pregnancy test, human subject.

A systematic review published in 1998 showed that home pregnancy test kits, when used by experienced technicians, are almost as accurate as professional laboratory testing (97.4%). When used by consumers, however, the accuracy fell to 75%: the review authors noted that many users misunderstood or failed to follow the instructions included in the kits. Improper usage may cause both false negatives and false positives.[10]

Timing of test

False negative readings can occur when testing is done too early. Quantitative blood tests and the most sensitive urine tests usually detect hCG shortly after implantation, which can occur anywhere from 6 to 12 days after ovulation.[1] Less sensitive urine tests and qualitative blood tests may not detect pregnancy until three or four days after implantation. Menstruation occurs on average 14 days after ovulation, so the likelihood of a false negative is low once a menstrual period is late.

Ovulation may not occur at a predictable time in the menstrual cycle, however. A number of factors may cause an unexpectedly early or late ovulation, even for women with a history of regular menstrual cycles. Using ovulation predictor kits (OPKs), or charting the fertility signs of cervical mucus or basal body temperature give a more accurate idea of when to test than day-counting alone.

The accuracy of a pregnancy test is most closely related to the day of ovulation, not of the act of intercourse or insemination that caused the pregnancy. It is normal for sperm to live up to five days[11] in the fallopian tubes, waiting for ovulation to occur.[12] It could take up to twelve further days for implantation to occur, meaning even the most sensitive pregnancy tests may give false negatives up to seventeen days after the act that caused the pregnancy. Because some home pregnancy tests have high hCG detection thresholds (up to 100 mIU/mL), it may take an additional three or four days for hCG to rise to levels detectable by these tests — meaning false negatives may occur up to three weeks after the act of intercourse or insemination that causes pregnancy.

False positives

False positive test results may occur for several reasons. These include: errors of test application, use of drugs containing the assay molecule, and non-pregnant production of the assay molecule.

Spurious evaporation lines may appear on many home pregnancy tests if read after the suggested 3–5 minute window or reaction time, independent of an actual pregnancy. False positives may also appear on tests used past their expiration date.

A woman who has been given an hCG injection as part of infertility treatment will test positive on pregnancy tests that assay hCG, regardless of her actual pregnancy status. However, some infertility drugs (e.g., clomid) do not contain the hCG hormone.[13]

Some diseases of the liver, cancers, and other medical conditions may produce elevated hCG and thus cause a false positive pregnancy test. These include choriocarcinoma and other germ cell tumors, IgA deficiencies, heterophile antibodies, enterocystoplasties, gestational trophoblastic diseases (GTD), and gestational trophoblastic neoplasms (GTN).

Viability

Pregnancy tests may be used to determine the viability of a pregnancy. Serial quantitative blood tests may be done, usually 2–3 days apart. Below an hCG level of 1,200 mIU/ml the hCG usually doubles every 48–72 hours, though a rise of 50–60% is still considered normal. Between 1,200 and 6,000 mIU/ml serum the hCG usually takes 72–96 hours to double, and above 6,000 mIU/ml, the hCG often takes more than four days to double. Failure to increase normally may indicate an increased risk of miscarriage or a possible ectopic pregnancy.

Ultrasound is also a common tool for determining viability. A lower than expected heart rate or missed development milestones may indicate a problem with the pregnancy.[9] Diagnosis should not be made from a single ultrasound, however. Inaccurate estimations of fetal age and inaccuracies inherent in ultrasonic examination may cause a scan to be interpreted negatively. If results from the first ultrasound scan indicate a problem, repeating the scan 7–10 days later is reasonable practice.[8]

READ MORE - Pregnancy test

Pregnancy test

Pregnancy test


A modern pregnancy test

A pregnancy test attempts to determine whether or not a woman is pregnant. Records of attempts at pregnancy testing have been found as far back as the ancient Greek and ancient Egyptian cultures. Modern pregnancy tests look for chemical markers associated with pregnancy. These markers are found in urine and blood, and pregnancy tests require sampling one of these substances. The first of these markers to be discovered, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), was discovered in 1930 to be produced by the trophoblast cells of the fertilised ovum (blastocyst). While hCG is a reliable marker of pregnancy, it cannot be detected until after implantation:[1] this results in false negatives if the test is performed during the very early stages of pregnancy. Obstetric ultrasonography may also be used to detect pregnancy. Obstetric ultrasonography was first practiced in the 1960s; the first home test kit for hCG was released in the mid-1970s.


History


Jan Steen's The Doctor's Visit. Included in this 17th century painting is a depiction of a dubious pregnancy test: a ribbon dipped in the patient's urine and then burned.[2]

The ancient Egyptians watered bags of wheat and barley with the urine of a possibly pregnant woman. Germination indicated pregnancy. The type of grain that sprouted was taken as an indicator of the fetus's sex. Hippocrates suggested that a woman who had missed her period should drink a solution of honey in water at bedtime: resulting abdominal distention and cramps would indicate the presence of a pregnancy. Avicenna and many physicians after him in the Middle Ages performed uroscopy, a nonscientific method to evaluate urine.

Selmar Aschheim and Bernhard Zondek introduced testing based on the presence of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in 1928.[3] Early studies of hCG had concluded that it was produced by the pituitary gland. In the 1930s, Georgeanna Jones discovered that hCG was produced not by the pituitary gland, but by the placenta. This discovery was important in relying on hCG as an early marker of pregnancy.[4]In the Aschheim and Zondek test, an infantile female mouse was injected subcutaneously with urine of the person to be tested, and the mouse later was killed and dissected. Presence of ovulation indicated that the urine contained hCG and meant that the person was pregnant. A similar test was developed using immature rabbits. Here, too, killing the animal to check her ovaries was necessary. An improvement arrived with the frog test, introduced by Lancelot Hogben, which still was used in the 1950s and allowed the frog to remain alive and be used repeatedly: a female frog was injected with serum or urine of the patient; if the frog produced eggs within the next 24 hours, the test was positive.

Direct measurement of antigens, such as hCG, was made possible with the invention of the radioimmunoassay in 1959,[5]. Radioimmunoassays require sophisticated apparatus and special radiation precautions and are expensive. In the 1970s, the discovery of monoclonal antibodies led to the development of the relatively simple and cheap immunoassays, such as agglutination-inhibition-based assays and sandwich ELISA, used in modern home pregnancy tests.

Modern tests

The test for pregnancy which can give the quickest result after fertilisation is a rosette inhibition assay for early pregnancy factor (EPF). EPF can be detected in blood within 48 hours of fertilization.[6] However, testing for EPF is expensive and time-consuming.

Most chemical tests for pregnancy look for the presence of the beta subunit of hCG or human chorionic gonadotropin in the blood or urine. hCG can be detected in urine or blood after implantation, which occurs six to twelve days after fertilization.[1] Quantitative blood (serum beta) tests can detect hCG levels as low as 1 mIU/mL, while urine tests have published detection thresholds of 20 mIU/mL to 100 mIU/mL, depending on the brand.[7] Qualitative blood tests generally have a threshold of 25 mIU/mL, and so are less sensitive than some available home pregnancy tests. Most home pregnancy tests are based on lateral-flow technology.

With obstetric ultrasonography the gestational sac sometimes can be visualized as early as four and a half weeks of gestation (approximately two and a half weeks after ovulation) and the yolk sac at about five weeks' gestation. The embryo can be observed and measured by about five and a half weeks. The heartbeat may be seen as early as six weeks, and is usually visible by seven weeks' gestation.[8][9]

Accuracy


Negative pregnancy test, human subject.

A systematic review published in 1998 showed that home pregnancy test kits, when used by experienced technicians, are almost as accurate as professional laboratory testing (97.4%). When used by consumers, however, the accuracy fell to 75%: the review authors noted that many users misunderstood or failed to follow the instructions included in the kits. Improper usage may cause both false negatives and false positives.[10]

Timing of test

False negative readings can occur when testing is done too early. Quantitative blood tests and the most sensitive urine tests usually detect hCG shortly after implantation, which can occur anywhere from 6 to 12 days after ovulation.[1] Less sensitive urine tests and qualitative blood tests may not detect pregnancy until three or four days after implantation. Menstruation occurs on average 14 days after ovulation, so the likelihood of a false negative is low once a menstrual period is late.

Ovulation may not occur at a predictable time in the menstrual cycle, however. A number of factors may cause an unexpectedly early or late ovulation, even for women with a history of regular menstrual cycles. Using ovulation predictor kits (OPKs), or charting the fertility signs of cervical mucus or basal body temperature give a more accurate idea of when to test than day-counting alone.

The accuracy of a pregnancy test is most closely related to the day of ovulation, not of the act of intercourse or insemination that caused the pregnancy. It is normal for sperm to live up to five days[11] in the fallopian tubes, waiting for ovulation to occur.[12] It could take up to twelve further days for implantation to occur, meaning even the most sensitive pregnancy tests may give false negatives up to seventeen days after the act that caused the pregnancy. Because some home pregnancy tests have high hCG detection thresholds (up to 100 mIU/mL), it may take an additional three or four days for hCG to rise to levels detectable by these tests — meaning false negatives may occur up to three weeks after the act of intercourse or insemination that causes pregnancy.

False positives

False positive test results may occur for several reasons. These include: errors of test application, use of drugs containing the assay molecule, and non-pregnant production of the assay molecule.

Spurious evaporation lines may appear on many home pregnancy tests if read after the suggested 3–5 minute window or reaction time, independent of an actual pregnancy. False positives may also appear on tests used past their expiration date.

A woman who has been given an hCG injection as part of infertility treatment will test positive on pregnancy tests that assay hCG, regardless of her actual pregnancy status. However, some infertility drugs (e.g., clomid) do not contain the hCG hormone.[13]

Some diseases of the liver, cancers, and other medical conditions may produce elevated hCG and thus cause a false positive pregnancy test. These include choriocarcinoma and other germ cell tumors, IgA deficiencies, heterophile antibodies, enterocystoplasties, gestational trophoblastic diseases (GTD), and gestational trophoblastic neoplasms (GTN).

Viability

Pregnancy tests may be used to determine the viability of a pregnancy. Serial quantitative blood tests may be done, usually 2–3 days apart. Below an hCG level of 1,200 mIU/ml the hCG usually doubles every 48–72 hours, though a rise of 50–60% is still considered normal. Between 1,200 and 6,000 mIU/ml serum the hCG usually takes 72–96 hours to double, and above 6,000 mIU/ml, the hCG often takes more than four days to double. Failure to increase normally may indicate an increased risk of miscarriage or a possible ectopic pregnancy.

Ultrasound is also a common tool for determining viability. A lower than expected heart rate or missed development milestones may indicate a problem with the pregnancy.[9] Diagnosis should not be made from a single ultrasound, however. Inaccurate estimations of fetal age and inaccuracies inherent in ultrasonic examination may cause a scan to be interpreted negatively. If results from the first ultrasound scan indicate a problem, repeating the scan 7–10 days later is reasonable practice.[8]

READ MORE - Pregnancy test

How to - Pregnant

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READ MORE - How to - Pregnant

How to - Pregnant

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