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Doctors used live frogs as pregnancy tests in the 1950s and the results were actually reliable

Home> News> Health

Published 18:00 12 Feb 2026 GMT

Doctors used live frogs as pregnancy tests in the 1950s and the results were actually reliable

Dr Edward R. Elkan conducted 295 pregnancy tests using African frogs

Britt Jones

Britt Jones

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There was a very strange tradition back in history where people used frogs to correctly identify if a patient was pregnant – and it worked in the weirdest way.

Science is amazing, and the way that the bodies of frogs work is equally as cool.

The slimy little creatures are more than just household pets and fly catchers – they're nature's pregnancy detectors, too.

According to Smithsonian Magazine, women conducted the ‘Hogben test’ before traditional pregnancy tests were created in the 1970s.

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That’s right, 50 years ago and beyond, people were using urine and frogs to figure things out, but to clarify, they weren’t urinating on the frogs.

Instead, female African clawed frogs were being imported and injected with urine into their hind legs before being put back in their cages.

If the frog ovulated and bore eggs, the patient was pregnant.

Replace the stick with a frog and you'll be transported to the 50s (Getty Stock Images)
Replace the stick with a frog and you'll be transported to the 50s (Getty Stock Images)

If not, better luck next time.

So, how does this work? Well, apparently the chorionic gonadotropin pregnancy hormone in the human body kickstarts ovulation in frogs.

In 1938, Dr Edward R. Elkan wrote about the test in the British Medical Journal, dubbing it the ‘xenopus pregnancy test’. “The discovery of what is now known as the xenopus pregnancy test is based on experiments conducted by Hogben (1930, 1931), who observed that hypophysectomy produced ovarian retrogression, and the injection of anterior pituitary extracts ovulation, in the female South African clawed toad.”

The reason why it became such a great method was because previously they’d do the same to mice, but would then have to dissect them to check for changes in their ovaries.

However, ‘toads were reusable and could be conveniently kept in aquaria’.

He added: “Among the 295 tests which I have done so far and in which 2,112 frogs were used I have not seen one clear positive that did not indicate a pregnancy. There were a few negative results which when repeated after a fortnight became positive, but I do not think that these can be regarded as failures.”

The frogs interact with female pregnancy hormones (Getty Stock Images)
The frogs interact with female pregnancy hormones (Getty Stock Images)

But this isn’t the only strange pregnancy method that has been used before the invention of the stick.

Ancient Egyptians, for example, used to urinate on wheat and barley to test. If it sprouted, it meant they were pregnant. If not, they’ve probably ruined their dinner.

Featured Image Credit: Getty Stock

Topics: Science, Animals, History, Weird

Britt Jones
Britt Jones

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