Yes, you should always continue to take your birth control unless your physician tells you to stop. Stopping your birth control and having unprotected sex will make you become pregnant. If you are experiencing any bleeding before the expected date or time of your period, you are most likely experiencing spotting or breakthrough bleeding. This is bleeding that is not considered a period, it is however a side effect from birth control that can last up to 3 months when you first begin birth control.
The columns are called "groups" while the rows are called "periods." Elements in the same groups share chemical properties, while those in periods share relative sizes of nuclei.
The horizontal rows on the Periodic Table are called periods, while the vertical columns are called groups or families. For instance, iodine is in the same group, but different period to fluorine, chlorine and bromine.
No, nitrogen and phosphorous are in different periods. Nitrogen is in period 2, while phosphorous is in period 3. However, both elements are in the same group, group 15.
Simply because the can is heated while it's being sealed. This removes all the remaining air inside - keeping the produce fresh for long periods of time.
While on birth control, your periods should last just as long as when you're not on birth control. Some women regularly experience 2-3 day periods while other women can regularly experience 6-8 day periods.
Hormonal birth control interferes with the effectiveness of ovulation kits. It also prevents ovulation. Please talk with your health care provider to get a better understanding of the medication you're taking.
If you put on the birth control patch while ovulating, you will likely still ovulate. Your next period may be later than expected. You will have pregnancy protection after you use the patch correctly for seven days.
Yes. Depo Provera changes the level of sex hormones. It is meant to prevent ovulation. YOu can't rely on ovulation tests while using hormonal birth control.
There are no known food-birth control pill interactions, neither for birth control nor menstrual control use.
Yes it is a side effect of the pills suppressing ovulation - many woman have no period while taking the pill.
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Yes, if you have not received an injection in 6 months or more and you did not have regular periods while taking the injection. The depo-provera shot suppresses ovulation. Once you begin having regular periods again, then your body should have returned to normal. However, many women still have periods, even when on this type of birth control, so after being off of the injection for several months and once you begin regular periods again, you need to check for ovulation using an ovulation predictor kit, just to make sure. However, realize that it may take as long as 18 months after the last depo-provera shot for periods to return to normal.
It is normal to have light periods or no period at all while birth control.
birth control manipulates your hormones to prevent pregnancy....your body is trying to normalize. you may need a higher dose pill. check with GYN doctor
Birth control can very likely make your periods a lot lighter. Since there is not as much blood as usual it takes longer to be pushed out of your vagina. Just like blood turns brown after it has been out of the body for a while and is no longer 'fresh' the same thing happens when the blood takes a while to be pushed out.
http://www.coolnurse.com/birthcontrol.htm http://www.crisispregnancy.com/birth-mother/pregnancy-questions.html http://www.epigee.org/guide/medfaq.html