Some women will have a bit of nausea or breast tenderness, and others will have no symptoms. Skipping pills accidentally may result in unscheduled bleeding/spotting. If the missed pills occurred early in the pack, there's an increased risk of pregnancy, and you should consider using a backup method like condoms or abstinence from vaginal sex until you've taken the pill correctly for seven days.
After using emergency contraception, your period may come a week earlier, a week later, or right on time.
You can start them whenever, but it is a possibility that your period will be delayed.
There are absolutely NO 'side effects' or negative effects from taking a shower during the menstrual cycle (or a period).
Birth control pills can stop your period without taking another medication. Instead of taking your sugar pills you skip this and start the next pack which will prevent your period from starting but you may experience some spotting. Personally I wouldn't be happy about taking two different medications which deal with your reproductive area. Speak to your doctor.
I believe the question here is 'can you take oral contraception to get your period?' - the simple answer is no, you cannot. Menstruation is a result of your menstrual cycle, if you ovulate but don't conceive the uterine lining will shed and ready itself for your next cycle - oral contraception suppresses your menstrual cycle to stop ovulation so you can't get pregnant, and thus you don't menstruate. The bleeding women experience on oral contraception is a withdrawal bleed not menstruation, and taking oral contraception won't force a period.
The side effects of taking birth control are: * Break through bleeding * Early or delayed menstrual cycle * Nausea * Abdominal cramping * Headache * Tiredness * Dry vagina * Breast tenderness
Delayed menstrual cycles have been reported when taking Ciprofloxacin. The delay can also be caused by the urinary tract infection. Both can cause delayed menstrual cycles.
No, taking birth control pills is designed to prevent ovulation, not induce ovulation.
Yes, but not for 7 days. Use another form of contraception until then.
If you want to suppress just the one period you can get specific pills from the doctor, but if you need contraception as well you can start birth control. However you will not be protected from pregnancy for about 3 weeks.
No. If you do not feel the effects of the pill within 1 or 2 hours of taking it, chances are you are not going to feel it at all. A lot of users don't feel the full effect of E their first time taking it.
They become lighter than usual!