If you mean your period started 27 days after the last once, that's really not unusual. That amount of variation is completely normal. If you're worried because your period started on the blue pill rather than the green, this is also no cause for medical concern, but if it bothers you, talk to your health care provider about a possible pill change.
You may begin your pill pack at any time during your cycle, but you will risk disrupting your body's natural flow of hormones. It is best to use a Sunday Start (the first Sunday after your period begins or, if your period begins on a Sunday, that day) or a Day 1 Start (beginning the pill the first day of your menstrual cycle). These methods ensure full protection within 7 days and work in tune with your body's natural cycle. Starting at any other time means that you will have to wait a full month for the pills to reach their full effectiveness and you will have to allow that time for your body to become accustomed to a new schedule of hormones.
No, you can't start your period with a birth cotrol pill. Birth control pills work to suppress your menstrual cycles so you don't ovulate, thus you don't menstruate - the bleeding women get on the pill is a withdrawal bleed, not menstruation. The pill works because it is taken every day to suppress normal hormonal changes, takig one pill will have very little effect on your cycles and certainly wouldn't cause your period to start when it's not due.
Yes
Thats a good question, probably yes. Call a local private hotline about this. Or just continue taking them and just wait and see.
No, it usually takes missing 3-5 pills.
no this is NOT normal, maybe you have forgotten the pill or miscalculated.
I stopped taking my birth control in December and in January I came on my period but in february I didnt come is this normal
That is usually not normal because you shouldn't get a period while on those pills you might want to see a doctor.
Most kinds of birth control will regulate your period, but will not make them 100% predictable. You can still have spotting and periods that start a few days early, or a few days late. However, if this early period is a heavier than normal flow for you, and/or if you experience very painful cramping, you should contact your doctor.
Starting a pack of birth control pills a day early does not increase the risk of pregnancy; in fact, it may decrease the risk. Continue taking your pills as normal. Your period will just arrive a day early that's all.
It means that your period came early. That's it, no more complicated than that.Also FYI on hormonal birth control you don't menstruate, you get a withdrawal bleed.
Normal side effect of starting birth control. It is common in the first three cycles. If it keeps occurring into the fourth cycle, or is troublesome to you at any time, contact your health care provider for advice.
It's possible that changing birth control pills will change the timing of your next period.
Birth control inhibits fertilization, not menstruation. Menstrual cycle will still continue.
The following will cause early bleeding: * Irregular period * Pregnancy * UTI * Hormonal Imbalance * Stopping birth control * Starting birth control
Starting the birth control pill will not cause an earlier period. It will delay your period. Talk to your health care provider or pharmacist to clarify what you should do next.
Your period isn't 'early' it's just earlier than you predicted - you predict when your period is due based on an average from your past cycles, but cycles change all the time so this isn't completely accurate. Anything up to a weeks variation from your average menstrual cycle is considered perfectly normal.