During ovulation some women experience some spotting. If it is more than 2Tablespoons you should see your GYN.
Periods are dark red or brown of even black. Vaginal bleeding is light and could not fill a pad.
not technically, but she can still experience vaginal bleeding
The best way to find out what is happening is to have an ultrasound scan, so you can actually see if there is a serious problem. Often there is no apparent reason for vaginal bleeding in pregnancy.
Anything that is out of the norm for you should be checked out by a medical professional. This may include: Bleeding between periods foul discharge abdominal pain pain during or after intercourse bleeding after intercourse sores, lumps or lesions
There could be several reasons why you notice streaks of vaginal blood between periods. Without having a full history, not knowing your age and medical status, and not being able to do a physical exam, one can only guess at a few possibilities: *if you are on birth control pills, it might be break-through bleeding (due to a low dose pill) *some women can spot around the time of ovulation *cervical or vaginal cancer can cause bleeding *infections can cause bleeding *some women can spot after intercourse if they have a "friable" cervix *women can bleed at the time of implantation when they become pregnant *perimenopausal women with low hormone levels can have odd bleeding If you are having recurrent (repeated) bleeding between your periods, you should discuss this with your doctor and be properly assessed.
If you are having a period, you are not pregnant. However many women confuse their periods with vaginal bleeding and vaginal bleeding can be a sign of pregnancy particularly in early pregnancy.
No, you cannot have periods after you are pregnant. You can have minor vaginal bleeding but it is not a full period flow.
There are instances of vaginal bleeding for long periods of time during pregnancy. However, it would depend upon how much bleeding; just spotting would be fine, but it is doubtful if bleeding occurs every day in large amounts.
hormonal changes, insertion of objects, stress, undiagnosed vaginal infection, implantational bleeding (one of the first signs of pregnancy), among others are the main causes for bleeding between periods for any woman.
It is a common initial step after physical examination when a patient complains of pelvic pain or abnormal vaginal bleeding.
Vaginal bleeding is period sweetie lol
When you're taking the birth control pill, you don't have a menstrual period. Instead, you have withdrawal bleeding. Menstrual periods are vaginal bleeding the follows ovulation by 14 days. Withdrawal bleeding is vaginal bleeding brought on by sudden cessation of hormone ingestion. Whether you have unscheduled bleeding from missing a pill or scheduled bleeding during your placebo week, neither is called a menstrual period.