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Some women get pregnant quickly; others don't. There can be all sorts of fertility reasons, but first of all, are you having sexual intercourse during your fertile days?
If you have a period, then the chances you are not pregnant anyway. A test is best carried out after a period has failed to arrive.
- What dates did your last 6 periods start (or as many as you know)?
- What dates did you have sex between your last two periods?
- What is the reason you test for pregnancy every 45 days? Why 45?
- What date did you last test?
- Where are you from?
- How old are you?
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You wouldn't normally expect to get withdrawal bleeding so soon. 7-14 days is common. But this also depends on where in your cycle you were when you took the i-pill. The pill is a hormonal pill which aims [1] to prevent ovulation, if not, then [2] to prevent fertilisation, and if not that, then [3] to prevent implantation. You haven't said when you started your last period, or how old you are.
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I would not put ovulation, fertilisation and implantation into any particular category, except that they occur in the luteal phase.
Does the "27th" refer to the 27th October or 27th Cycle Day?
If you mean 27th October, then I would need to know the date of Cycle Day 1
In what sense do you mean she comes into a part of the cycle?
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If your period were due 3-5 Nov, then 24 Oct was not likely a fertile day. But having taken U72, your cycle (period start to next period start) will have been disrupted and your period start may have been delayed for a week or so.
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