Analyze serum progesterone using unit conversion and phase checks. See ranges, flags, and summary instantly. Designed for clearer hormone result review and planning today.
Main page sections stay in one vertical flow, while the input area switches to 3 columns on large screens, 2 on smaller screens, and 1 on mobile.
These examples show how the tool can classify a value against the selected context.
| Case | Value (ng/mL) | Value (nmol/L) | Context | Expected Range | Illustrative Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample A | 0.60 | 1.91 | Follicular | 0.10 to 0.90 | Within range |
| Sample B | 8.40 | 26.71 | Ovulatory | 0.10 to 12.00 | Within range |
| Sample C | 14.20 | 45.16 | Luteal | 1.80 to 23.90 | Within range |
| Sample D | 6.80 | 21.62 | Luteal, Day 22 | 1.80 to 23.90 | Within range, but below the common day 21–23 ovulation screening threshold |
| Sample E | 32.00 | 101.76 | Pregnancy First Trimester | 11.00 to 44.30 | Within range |
This calculator combines unit conversion, range comparison, midpoint deviation, and optional ovulation-screening notes.
| Metric | Formula | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| SI conversion | nmol/L = ng/mL × 3.18 | Converts conventional units into SI units. |
| Reverse conversion | ng/mL = nmol/L ÷ 3.18 | Converts SI units back into conventional units. |
| Midpoint | (Lower Limit + Upper Limit) ÷ 2 | Shows the center of the selected interval. |
| Deviation | Measured Value − Midpoint | Shows how far the result sits from the range center. |
| Range position | ((Value − Lower Limit) ÷ (Upper Limit − Lower Limit)) × 100 | Shows where the result falls inside the range when it is within limits. |
| Ovulation screen note | Day 21 to 23 result > 10 ng/mL | Often used as supportive evidence of ovulation in a timed luteal sample. |
Reference ranges vary by assay, specimen timing, medication use, pregnancy stage, and the laboratory performing the test.
It converts progesterone units, compares a result with a selected reference interval, shows midpoint deviation, and adds timing-based interpretation notes for common review scenarios.
No. It is an educational interpretation helper. Diagnosis depends on symptoms, ultrasound, repeat testing, medications, clinical history, and direct review by a qualified clinician.
Progesterone changes across the menstrual cycle. A value can look low or high depending on whether the sample was taken in the follicular, ovulatory, or luteal phase.
Ranges vary by assay method, equipment, calibration, reporting unit, patient population, and whether the lab uses pregnancy-specific or cycle-phase specific intervals.
It lets you match the exact lower and upper limits printed on a lab report. That often gives a more relevant comparison than a generic interval.
A timed luteal progesterone sample is commonly used to support ovulation review. The tool adds a note when the interpretation goal is ovulation screening.
Yes. Fertility treatment, progesterone supplementation, and some hormone therapies can change measured values and should be considered before drawing conclusions.
Often no. Trend testing, sample timing, symptoms, ultrasound findings, and other hormones may be needed for a more complete reproductive or pregnancy assessment.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.