This is a question for your doctor or midwife as they know you and needs.
Menstrual cycles will come to an end as women go through menopause. Women's menstrual cycles will also be stopped if they fall pregnant, while on hormonal birth control, or after a hysterectomy.
The average menstrual cycle length is 28 days - but everyone is different. As a note while on birth control pills you don't have a menstrual cycle, the pill works by suppressing your menstrual cycles so you no longer ovulate.
Birth control has a number of objectives. These include: 1. Preventing pregnancy 2. Regulating the menstrual cycle 3. Acne treatment 4. Other medical treatments (such as problems associated with an irregular menstrual cycle)
An oral contraceptive (birth control) can do wonders in regulating a menstrual cycle.
Lesbian women may use birth control to regulate their menstrual cycles, which is a major reason many women use it.
It takes about a year to get your body back into balance. You may miss periods for quite some time or even have more than one period a month. It depends on the woman. It's great you are off the pill because they aren't that good for you. Birth control, short-term, used for heavy bleeding or uncontrolled periods can be a good thing, but to take them for years is dangerous.
Any combination birth control pill will give you more regular vaginal bleeding. None of them will cause a lasting change in your menstrual period. When you stop taking them, you will return to your previous menstrual pattern.
The menstrual cycle is the reproductive cycle of a woman, while she is of reproductive age and not suppressing her cycles with hormonal birth control, she is always experiencing her menstrual cycles. Hunger is a basic human need, it lets you know when to eat, you will always be hungry throughout your entire menstrual cycle - this is called being human.
I would not trust that particular birth control if it did not regulate your menstrual cycle. I had a similar problem after using a particular brand for a while and me and my doctor agreed to change to another pill with more hormone in it.
The risks involved with the Depo-Provera birth control shot are irregular menstrual cycles, nervousness, headaches, depression, weight gain, acne, changes in appetite, hair loss among others.
Birth control pills should stop your menstrual bleeding. I would suggest you stop the pills and talk to your doctor
Yes, your menstrual cycles will be irregular at first.Hormonal birth control works by suppressing your menstrual cycles so that you no longer ovulate, you also no longer menstruate while on hormonal birth control - the bleeding you experience is a withdrawal bleed, for example on the combination pill you get a withdrawal bleed as a result of the drop in synthetic hormones when going from active to inactive pills.Once you stop taking hormonal birth control your body has to reestablish it's normal hormonal balance and menstrual cycles - this can take up to twelve months, although you should see your period within three months. Remember that menstruation won't follow the same pattern of withdrawal bleeds, also remember that you may get pregnant when not on birth control.