Wait I got confused. The girl should be 7 weeks 3 days on the day of ultrasould from LMP (Jul 27, 2016). The result of the mean sac diameter is 5 weeks 4 days. The EDC is 03 May, 2017. So still the conception is later the Aug 21?
Your boyfriend needs to call the family courts in your area of jurisdiction and find out what labs are approved for doing paternity testing.
The ultrasound evidence has two conflicting pieces of information on it. The 5w4d measurement has him as the father (and so does the May 15 due date). The May 3 due date does not even match the 5w4d measurement. He needs to test.
This should be the kind of testing where he and she and the baby get swabbed at a lab and the samples are handled by a neutral third party.
The 5w4d count and the May 15 due date give him a very good chance of being the dad. He needs to test, lest he owe back child support without even having a chance to know for sure. If the test comes up positive, he should talk things over with a lawyer.
Her LMP was Jul 27, 2016. On the ultrasound the exact result was "Early intrauterine 5 wks and 4 dys by mean sac diameter". Her EDC is May 3, 2017 and AOG is 7 wks 3 dys. This is all based from the ultrasound on Sep 17, 2016. The baby was born thru C-sec on May 5, 2017 since the mother was in labor for 3 days and the baby already pooped inside her. I tried the conception date calculators online based on this result and it revealed that the conception is on Aug 11, 2016. My boyfriend and her had sex on Aug 21, 2016. Hope this clarify my question.
Hi, what does "the baby is almost 14 days older on the possible consumption" mean? If the baby was seen by ultrasound and measured 5 weeks 4 days GA on September 17, that points to conception on August 23, which absolutely could mean your boyfriend is the dad. -- I assume you are aware that when a doctor says "x weeks 'pregnant,'" he or she means that many weeks from a computed first day of the woman's last period, not that many weeks from conception? The ultrasound looks at the baby's size and its computer adds two weeks at the front end (before the baby was conceived) to reach a supposed first day of the last period, even if that is not the actual first day of the last period. A two-week allowance is always added at the front by any medical person, to calibrate with when an average woman's last period would have been given a baby the size she has.