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The Pregnancy Panic Companion: When Periods Are Irregular

This is part of our Pregnancy Panic Companion. Click here to go back to the beginning.

You said you are scared about a pregnancy, but your menstrual period (or your partner’s) is irregular or infrequent.

Instructions for the timing of pregnancy⁠ tests talk about taking tests when a period⁠ is absent or late.  But if periods are irregular or infrequent, you can’t know when to expect a period, so you also can’t know when a period is late.

So:

  • If it has been three weeks or less since the risk you are worried about, then the information on this page is what applies to you, because it is probably too early for you to take a pregnancy test⁠.
  • If it has been three or more weeks since the risk you are worried about, then the information on this page is what applies to you, because enough time has passed since your risk for a pregnancy test to give accurate results.

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    Advice
    • Sarah Riley

    Unprotected sex of any sort (even without ejaculation) has both a pregnancy risk and an STI risk. So yes, you do have a risk from this contact. Pre-ejaculate (which happens throughout the course of an erection) isn’t something that anybody is really going to feel happening and it can contain sperm…