What is the rabbit test?

"rabbit test" refers to the method at the end of the 20th years of injection of female urine to a female rabbit to test pregnancy. Within a few days of taking the rabbit test, the rabbit ovaries will show changes if a woman is pregnant. Changes occur as a result of the presence of human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), a hormone that occurs in the uterus when female eggs are fertilized.

The term "Rabbit died", which means that the woman was made by a rabbit and was found to be pregnant. Although popular, however, the term is incorrect when the rabbit died, whether the woman was discovered as pregnant or not. The animals had to be killed to explore the ovaries. The rabbit test was later revised so that ovarian changes could be checked for living, rather than dead, rabbits.

Rabbit urine tests have been replaced by blood tests and home pregnancy tests. Both of these methods also test HCG in the body, but do not use rabbits at all. In contrast to The other method, rabbit test is BIotest or animal type of test.

Maxwell E. Lapham was one of the medical scientists working on the development of the rabbit test. He was the director of the Medical Division Division and then Dean Emeritus at Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans, Louisiana, the United States. Dr. Lapham died in 1983 at the age of 83.

The

rabbit test is also known as the Friedman test after Maurice H. Friedman. Friedman, German, was the first person to use rabbits for pregnancy tests. Friedman has developed his rabbit test from the first pregnancy test, aschhiem-renders used on mice.

The pregnancy test Aschhieem-Green was invented by the Germans Selmar Aschheim and Bernhard Zondek. It was Zondek who first discovered hormonal HCG in pregnant women. It was found that Friedman's rabbit test was more accurate than the aschheitests of the pregnancy of the M-zonek performed in mice. The German word for pregnancy tests is Schwangerchaftstests , while the "rabbit test" in German is Kaninchementest .

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