No. Birth Control is made with estrogen and progesterone hormones. The pregnancy tests look for HCG, a completely different hormone. If you have enough HCG in your system, it will show on the test, regardless of how much or how little estrogen or progesterone you have inside your system.
Some pills can affect birth control. If your ill this can sometimes effect birth control too. You need to speak to a medical professional to find out for definite but its possible malaria pills may affect your birth control.
Birth control pills work by suppressing the production of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in the body, which helps prevent ovulation and pregnancy.
Asprin doesn't affect birth control.
Hormonal birth control can affect the level of thyroid binding globulins. That doesn't affect most of the thyroid levels that your health care provider would check, but your provider should be aware of the type of birth control you're using just in case they decide to test these levels. Hormonal birth control does not affect the level of T4, T3, or TSH, the typical levels that are checked.
This condition may improve or may get worse with the use of birth control pills
Yes, antibiotics can potentially reduce the effectiveness of birth control pills.
You should not mix pills with your birth control pills. This candamage your insides or cause your birth control to be ineffective. Mixing pills is dangerous.
Birth control pills have no effect on pregnancy tests.
Yes, when you stop birth control pills, the hormone levels in your body drop. Then you have withdrawal bleeding.
It is known to reduce the effect of birth control pills
Birth control pills work by suppressing the release of FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone) and LH (luteinizing hormone) from the pituitary gland. This prevents ovulation and helps to prevent pregnancy.
Yes, missing birth control pills increases the likelihood of getting pregnant.