The birthcontrol pills will introduce more estrogen into your system that will help regulate your period. This is a very common thing for doctors to do to help regulate the period.
Lesbian women may use birth control to regulate their menstrual cycles, which is a major reason many women use it.
Birth control pills will help regulate the menstrual cycle.
This is a question for your doctor or midwife as they know you and needs.
Cyclenorm E and P is a form of Birth Control that is taken orally. It is commonly used as a preventative measure for unwanted pregnancy or to regulate abnormal menstrual cycles.
Menstrual cycles will come to an end as women go through menopause. Women's menstrual cycles will also be stopped if they fall pregnant, while on hormonal birth control, or after a hysterectomy.
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.
Birth control pills can't regulate your period, that's impossible - they work by stopping your menstrual cycles so that you don't ovulate, thus you also don't menstruate (bleeding women get on the pill is a withdrawal bleed, not menstruation). You need to have tests carried out to determine why your periods are irregular and then look into treatment options.
yes it can. In about 3-4 years of you having your period I can regulate itself
There are no known food-birth control pill interactions, neither for birth control nor menstrual control use.
Females who are sexually active, want to be protected from pregnancy, or would like to regulate there menstrual cycle, should use birth control.
It takes about a year to get your body back into balance. You may miss periods for quite some time or even have more than one period a month. It depends on the woman. It's great you are off the pill because they aren't that good for you. Birth control, short-term, used for heavy bleeding or uncontrolled periods can be a good thing, but to take them for years is dangerous.
Hormonal birth control can make the menstrual cycle more predictable during the time you take them. After you stop, your period is likely to return to its previous pattern. There are other treatments available for specific causes of irregular menstrual cycles, some of which can be used by women trying to get pregnant. See your health care provider for help.