menstruation
Menstruation
It is blood from the very small vessels of the endometrial uterine lining - which is shed monthly, as part of the menstrual cycle.
It is clumpy because of blood clots. The uterine lining that is shedding, sometimes had blood clots. nothing to be worries about.:)
Like the uterine lining, this tissue builds up and sheds in response to monthly hormonal cycles. However, there is no natural outlet for the blood discarded from these implants
Progesterone
Yes, you bleed when you have your period. Menstruation is the shedding of the uterine lining, which includes uterine tissue and blood.
A menstrual period is when the uterus lining sheds as a result of a cycle without pregnancy occurring. Menstrual flow is made up of the uterine tissue, blood, cervical mucus, and discharge.
On the tampon you will primarily see menstrual blood and discharge - although you may not be able to see the discharge as it's mixed with the blood. You can also see clots, cervical mucus mixed with blood, and larger pieces of the uterine lining. You should not see pus as community answer claims.
Menstruation results in the discharge of the uterus lining, consisting of blood and tissue.
Menstrual blood doesn't clot like other blood because if it did it would be detrimental to the whole process of the uterine lining shedding. The 'clots' people talk about in menstrual flow are normally larger chunks of the uterine lining, normal during heavier flow days.
No, menstruation is the process through which the uterus lining sheds - so you'd see uterine tissue and blood. White goo is likely just normal vaginal discharge that you get throughout your menstrual cycle, this isn't menstruation.
The large chunks of blood during your period is actually uterine lining, and this is perfectly normal. The main waste product during menstruation is the uterine lining, you can see this as chunks in your menstrual flow that may look similar to raw liver.
Menstrual flow isn't just blood, the blood is actually secondary to the main waste material: uterine tissue. Basically the chunks are pieces of the uterine lining itself, or may be lumps of bloody mucus.