You cannot stop your period for a month, some people will tell you just keep taking Birth Control pills, however, this has proven to be dangerous to your health.
There are birth control pills specifically designed to stop your period for up to 3 months at a time. Some women stop menstruating completely while taking the pill.
There is no medical reason to have a period every month and it does not cause you any harm to suppress menstruation for one month, three months or indefinitely.
If you mean your menstrual cycle, you cannot stop that for a month or anything else for that matter, it is a very unwise thing to do for your health, the only way you can delay your period is if you are on birth control pills, however, again this is not advised because you will throw your natural body rhythms out of whack.
Stop eating until it goes for good, worked for me.
Doc has given me this medicine to Stop the menses
It takes 10 lunar months. ( Surprizingly menses take one lunar month.)
Because menses is a stage in puberty where estrogen increases in a woman and it takes until the woman is 15 for her to recieve all the estrogen she needs
Most women will have one period of menstruation per month. Disease can cause more or less as can hormonal imbalance. A woman who has more than one due to hormones can often take the birth control pill to make her have only one.
Mifepristone
Yes, this is a normal "side effect" of depo. My menses also stopped after my first shot.
Pills and the IUD can reduce a woman's menses to 'spotting" , to one or two days rather than 5 to 7. It can also stop periods all together.
yes, medications disrupt menses...make sure you notify your physician and us birth control because pregnancy also stops menses. Seroquel is not compatible with pregnancy according to the PDR.
"Why blood is released during menses?"
It's for irregular menses so it should actually help you get pregnant. If you have not gotten your period you could be pregnant right now.
Meno- is the medical terminology combining form meaning menses, as in menorrhagia (heavy menses) or dysmenorrhea (painful or difficult menses).Men/o, Mens/o,
Go to the link below, " Fertility timing", and you will find the information you are looking for with explanations and charts.