Consult your doctor. They had to have given you the prescription and give you the best answer that question.
Yes, a women needs to have a menstrual cycle. There is no healthy way of stopping your menstrual cycle without taking certain birth controls.
Yes. Stress and other factors can impact your cycle.
Becoming sexually active does not generally change your menstrual cycle. If you are using contraception, such as the birth control pill, coil or Depo Provera injection, then your menstrual cycle can change. Your periods may stop or they could become shorter and lighter in flow.
The copper IUD (brand name Paragard in the US) is a long-term, highly effective birth control method that does not change the timing of menstrual periods.
Any combination birth control pill will give you more regular vaginal bleeding. None of them will cause a lasting change in your menstrual period. When you stop taking them, you will return to your previous menstrual pattern.
* stress * birth control * poor diet * illness * change in medications
Birth control pills will help regulate the menstrual cycle.
It is common for American women to use a tampon or maxi-pad when they are menstruating. Some women will choose types of birth controls that reduce or eliminate menstrual cycles completely.
The average menstrual cycle length is 28 days - but everyone is different. As a note while on birth control pills you don't have a menstrual cycle, the pill works by suppressing your menstrual cycles so you no longer ovulate.
The menstrual cycle is the reproductive cycle, unless a woman is pregnant or on hormonal birth control then during her reproductive years she is always in her menstrual cycle. A woman can have sex at any point in her menstrual cycle as long as she uses birth control.
Birth Control.
Birth control pills should stop your menstrual bleeding. I would suggest you stop the pills and talk to your doctor