not necessarily
Your menstrual cycle could have been mistaken for implantation bleeding. I recommend that you take a pregnancy tests to confirm.
There is a chance of pregnancy if you have not started your menstrual cycle. Stress or late ovulation can also cause changes in the cycle.
The reason your first week of pregnancy actually starts on the week of your menstrual cycle is so that your doctor can calculate your expected delivery date!
Menstrual cycle refers to the entire reproductive cycle, starting during menstruation - there is no 'after the menstrual cycle' but I think you might mean after menstruation. After menstruation the cycle starts again, typically a woman will be fertile around a week after menstruation so her body will produce fertile cervical mucus and she will ovulate.
a menstrual cycle (more comonly known as a period) lasts about a week and happens once a month.
Usually, it's best to wait about a week after your expected AF. So if you have the average 28 day cycle, it is a good time to test!
They do not affect the menstrual cycle itself, however, they WILL affect your birth control (decreasing the effectiveness), which CAN effect your menstrual cycle. You can get pregnant or have changes in your menstrual cycle as if you had missed a week or so on your pills.
The pregnancy test consists of looking for traces of certain hormones within a urine sample. These hormones are only present when one is pregnant. So yes you can get a pregnancy at any time regardless of your menstrual cycle.
Menstruation occurs at the start of the menstrual cycle and normally lasts around a week, so menstruation would occur days 1-7 of the menstrual cycle.
spottings a sign of pregnancy possibly..
You take it daily during the time that you want to avoid pregnancy, whether you have intercourse that day or not. Depending on when you start it with relation to the menstrual cycle, you may need to wait up to a week to rely on it to prevent pregnancy.
You can take Norethisterone which will stop your period for as long as you take it.