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Did you find a suspicious-looking stain on some clothing, bedsheets, or other fabric? You can figure out if the stain is semen using simple tests and tools. We’re here to walk you through exactly what to do and what to look for, along with ways to clean away those pesky stains once and for all.
Things You Should Know
- Use a blacklight—if the stain is sperm, it will likely light up.
- Check the color. Sperm stains are usually gray, light yellow, or off-white.
- Feel the texture of the stain. If it's crusty, it could be sperm.
- Remove dried stains with delicate detergent, upholstery-grade stain remover, or enzymatic pre-treatment cleaner.
Steps
How can you detect sperm stains?
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1Use a blacklight to detect sperm stains. Switch off the lights in the room and hold the blacklight over the material. Guide the light down the fabric and see what appears—in many cases, sperm lights up underneath the lamp. The stain itself may be yellow, blue, or some other color, depending on the exact light that you’re using.[1]
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2Transform your smartphone into a blacklight if you don't have one. Start by covering the LED camera light with a strip of transparent tape and coloring over the lens with a blue permanent marker. Layer another piece of tape on top and color it in with the blue marker again. Then, stick an extra section of tape over top and shade over the lens with a purple permanent marker. Your homemade blacklight is now ready to go![5]
- This DIY trick is much more useful than a blacklight phone app. While these apps simulate a blacklight, they don’t actually mimic the effects of one.
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3Get more definitive proof with an at-home test. Use an at-home semen detection kit to test the stain that you spotted under the blacklight—it’ll test the fabric for acid phosphatase (AP), an enzyme found in semen and vaginal stains. Just keep in mind that this test isn’t completely conclusive, since AP is also found in various bodily fluids.[6]
- You can also use an at-home Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) test to narrow down your results, but this isn’t totally conclusive, either.
- If you’re really curious about the stain’s contents, send a fabric sample to a private laboratory for testing.
References
- ↑ https://forensicresources.org/2011/forensic-tests-for-semen-what-you-should-know/
- ↑ https://sciencenotes.org/what-is-black-light/
- ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10585986/
- ↑ https://sciencenotes.org/list-of-things-that-glow-under-black-light/
- ↑ https://www.osc.org/diy-blacklight-use-this-hack-to-turn-any-smartphone-into-a-blacklight/
- ↑ https://privatelabresults.com/semen-glow-uv-light/
- ↑ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7555023/
- ↑ https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/symptoms/21600-yellow-semen
- ↑ https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/uk/house-and-home/household-advice/a656973/remove-semen-stains/