The bleeding during menstruation is called as withdrawal bleeding. There is no pregnancy and nature wants to shed away the lining epithelium. The oestrogen and progesterone levels hormone level drops dawn and that results into menstruation bleeding.
Various things can happen to cause bleeding outside of the menstrual cycle. For example, it is possible for sex to cause bleeding.
No, the antibiotic Cipro can not cause excessive vaginal bleeding. If you are experiencing bleeding and it is not your regualr menstrual cycle, you will need to see your doctor or go to an emergency room asap.
Heavy bleeding during menstruation is usually related to a hormonal imbalance.
you took the sword out wrong
Abnormal bleeding includes bleeding between menstrual periods, excessive bleeding during a menstrual period, or bleeding after menopause
Birth control pills should stop your menstrual bleeding. I would suggest you stop the pills and talk to your doctor
No but pregnancy can. Be sure to get a pregnancy test to make sure that's not the cause of your late period.Women can still have periods if they have chlamydia. You can have chlamydia with or without getting your period.
No, eating flour cannot slow down your menstrual bleeding at all.There are medications that can help lighten menstrual bleeding, and over time dietary changes can reduce menstrual flow too. But there is nothing you can eat to 'slow down' your menstrual period.
If the bleeding is between periods then obviously it can't be menstrual bleeding - menstruation is your period. If you're seeing mid-cycle spotting the most likely cause is hormonal imbalance causing mid-cycle spotting with hormonal shifts around ovulation. This may be the onset of early menopause.
The correct medical term is menorrhagia.Menorrhagia means excessive bleeding during menstruation.Excessive menstrual bleeding is menorhagia.Irregular menstrual bleeding is metrorhagia.Irregular excessive menstrual bleeding is menometrorhagia.Menorrhagia is excessive uterine bleeding during the menses.Menorrhagia
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.
Gunshot, stabbing, really heavy menstrual cycle, and internal bleeding.