It's possible to have unscheduled bleeding in the first three months of Birth Control use. After that, you should settle into a more regular pattern. There is no medical phenomenon thought of as "your body acting up on birth control." If you are bleeding heavily, have been bleeding for a prolonged period, or have additional symptoms like pain or unusual vaginal discharge, you should contact your health care provider.
Your period will come naturally. Birth control does not help you get your period. Your body decides when you will get your period.
usually on birth control you have a very light period but until your body gets used ti the birth control then you can have anywhere from a normal flow to a very light flow.
When you take 28-day birth control, you get a fake period from the hormone levels in your body. Scientists have found this is fine for your body, and will not hurt you.
Yes, birth control can effect your period. It messes with your hormones, so it can make your body go out of whack like messing with your period or gaining weight.
There is no way to know when you will start your period when you first start taking Triphasal birth control. You just have to wait and see how your body reacts.
The nervous system is the fast-acting control system.
Yes, 4 days of birth control can cause an irregular period as the birth control messes up your hormones and throws your body's natural rhythm out of whack.
no that is not true you it depend on your body and wen ur period is
You start to ovulate and get your period back and you can get pregnant again.
Yes birth control changes your cycle causing your body to have to adjust to the birth control after a few weeks it should become a normal schedule.
You can take birth control to have a show of vaginal bleeding, but birth control does not "jump start" your period. When you stop taking it, you are likely to return to your previous pattern of menstrual bleeding (or lack thereof) unless something else changes in your body.
If you skip a period while on the birth control pill, the lining of the uterus didn't build up in the previous month due to the hormones in the birth control pill. Therefore, your body does not retain the blood from your period - there's no lining to retain. However, it is possible to remain or feel bloated.