The Student Room Group

Reply 1

well some people can already tell when they're pregnant even without a test. it's just instinct i guess

Reply 2

No menstrual cycle? Or maybe in the olden days it was a given you were gonna get up the duff if you were at it lol

Reply 3

Well, so far I've found this!

BBC
"In the 1930s and 40s, live female Xenopus frogs were used widely in Europe, Australasia and north America in pregnancy testing.

A sample of the woman's urine was injected under the frog's skin; if the woman was pregnant, a hormone in her urine caused the frog to ovulate.

Alternative tests involved male frogs and toads, which produced sperm in response to the human hormone gonadotrophin.

Thousands of Xenopus were exported from Africa each year, potentially carrying Batrachochytrium with them, and - perhaps through occasional escapes - delivering it to the habitats of other continents, where it could inflict major damage on amphibian species that were more vulnerable. "


Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4257232.stm

Reply 4

Tarts_n_Vicars
No menstrual cycle?

I guess, but some women do bleed in the early months.

What I'm really after is old wives' tales about pregnancy testing from the past :smile:

Reply 5

I read the book 'Burned Alive' by Souad who lived in the Middle East in a poor place and her mother knew she was pregnant because she had a spot on her nose :eek:

Reply 6

Poor froggies! :eek:

This reminds me of how I've always wondered about that scene in Joan of Arc where the nun check whether Joan is still a virgin. How can she tell? :confused: It seems like she puts sth up there but..?!

Reply 7

hugatree


This reminds me of how I've always wondered about that scene in Joan of Arc where the nun check whether Joan is still a virgin. How can she tell? :confused: It seems like she puts sth up there but..?!

Check whether the hymen is in place :rolleyes: Not actually accurate, it can be broken by doing sport or falling over or anything else really:rolleyes: .

Reply 8

Helen_w
Check whether the hymen is in place :rolleyes: Not actually accurate, it can be broken by doing sport or falling over or anything else really:rolleyes: .
But you can't actually feel the hymen can you? :s: It's not like a foil that gets in the way, it's on the 'walls' of your vagina... I thought... Broke mine without sex and it wasn't a big deal. If that Joan had broken it any other way they wouldn't have let her go. Silly people.

Reply 9

No, but you are supposed to be able to see it aren't you? :confused:

Reply 10

Helen_w
No, but you are supposed to be able to see it aren't you? :confused:
.. No? :confused:

I should google this, but I don't feel like looking at vaginas...

Reply 11

Helen_w
Check whether the hymen is in place :rolleyes: Not actually accurate, it can be broken by doing sport or falling over or anything else really:rolleyes: .

Yes, can also be broken by horse riding which Joan appeared to do a lot!

Reply 12

Talya
Yes, can also be broken by horse riding which Joan appeared to do a lot!
Yeah... I think the story is a bit wobbly.

Joan was so much hotter with long hair, too.

Reply 13

hugatree
.. No? :confused:

I should google this, but I don't feel like looking at vaginas...


Erm yeah you can, it's at the entrance of the vagina...

Reply 14

morningtheft
Erm yeah you can, it's at the entrance of the vagina...
*googles afterall now*

EDIT: my god, they come in all shapes and sizes. In drawn pictures, btw, on Wikipedia.

Reply 15

The ancient Egyptians watered bags of wheat and barley with the urine of a possibly pregnant woman. Germination indicated pregnancy, and based on what type of grain sprouted they predicted the gender of the fetus. 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 hCG in 1928. In their test an infanile female mouse was injected subcutaneously with urine of the person to be tested, and some time later the mouse was sacrificed. Presence of ovulation indicated that the urine contained hCG and meant that the person was pregnant. A similar test was developed using immature rabbits, the rabbit test. Here, too, it was necessary to kill the animal to check its ovaries. An improvement arrived with the frog test that was still used in the 1950s. 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. In the frog test, the animal remained alive, and could be used again.


Source- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_pregnancy_test. Good old Wikipedia :biggrin: