What about ghost line in pregnancy tests?

if you have read my other qustions then you my under stand what i mean

Answer:
What's an evaporation line? Evaporation ("evap") lines result with the test's antibody strip just looks slightly different than the space around it. There is a line of antibodies (usually made from mouse cells) in the Control and Test section. The Control line binds with any liquid and turns pink (or blue, in tests using blue dye.) The Test/Result line turns pink only if pregnancy hormone is detected. If not, the moisture passes over this strip and does not turn pink. It may, however, become more visible when the light hits the moisture on the strip-- it may appear gray, colorless, like a "dent" in the test, or like a "ghost line." It may appear at any time-- as soon as the urine hits it, after a few minutes as the test absorbs the moisture, or after the 10-minute time limit. It may appear when the test is drying, or after it has dried. It may disappear as the test is drying, or after the test has dried, or not disappear at all.

The simple fact is that there is always "something there" that is slightly visible-- it's simply the antibodies on the test that would turn pink in the presence of hCG. When the test becomes wet, or as it dries, or after it dries, the antibody strip may become more visible. Therefore, all tests may have them. It is not a defect; it's just how tests are made.

A real positive is identified by its color (pink or blue, whatever the color of the test's dye is) and its appearance within 10 minutes of urinating on the stick. A line that appears after 10 minutes, regardless of color, must be considered an evap line and is caused by the test's chemicals changing. HPT's are rapid assay diagnostics, which means any results appearing after the "rapid" time limit of 10 minutes are invalid.

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You have several other questions, why don't you just explain clearly what you mean rather than expecting us to deduce it after reading your other questions?
The instructions enclosed with the pregnancy test usually say that any line - even a very faint line - should be considered a line.
I am not going to look into your other questions cuz if you have one then you should put the work into it so you get accurate answers, so Im assuming you might be talking about evaporation lines. If there is no color then it isn't a true line it's just where it would show if you were pregnant. If there is color then no matter how faint you are pregnant.
The same thing happened to me with my last pregnancy. Wait 5-7 days and retest using first morning urine. I waited 5 days and retested and there was no question that it was positive. Most tests say that you dont have to use first morning urine but first morning urine has the most pregnancy hormone in it because it has been sitting in the bladder for a few hours.

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