Basal body temperature or BBT is your body temperature taken in the morning before rising from bed. The charting of BBT across menstrual cycle helps to tell if you ovulated and conceived. Throughout the month, you may see rises and dips in temperature on the chart. These are the signs of hormonal changes.
In the morning, your body temperature is the lowest, so it is termed as basal body temperature. It turns normal after you start moving around. Therefore, you will need to use mercury thermometer to measure your BBT first thing on waking up in the morning and before getting out of bed.
In the first phase, basal temperatures will be very steady. During ovulation, there will be a little drop in temperature, but it will increase after ovulation. If it stays elevated mean you have possibly conceived. Basal body temperature after conception will spike and remain high almost until the delivery.
For example:
This is an example, but the BBT of every woman differs because of hormonal changes. You need to keep track of your personal BBT for an entire cycle to find your normal range. At the start, temperature maintains a specific pattern, but a slight drop will be noticed on day 12 or 13 up to 16. Then it will increase until the next period.
As soon as your menstrual cycle starts temperature drops to basically the same numbers charted in the first week of the previous month. Fortunately, if you successfully conceived then the temperature will not dip but stay little elevated. Thus, you get to know if you got pregnant in the given month.
Even cervical mucus shows changes in the different menstrual cycle phase. From day 1 to day 7 it will appear bloody depending on the length of your periods. Slowly it will start to change. From second week changes will be seen daily.
BBT and cervical mucus charting are both methods that can help you predict ovulation and possible conceiving time.
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