Think of it this way, you haven't had you period for a year, when a women menstrates she is cleaning her system, releasing the old and letting fresh new eggs and blood in. Your system has not been able to do this in awhile so yes the blood will be brown and may have a slight odor to it for a bit until you body has cleaned it's self.
It's normal to bleed and not to bleed. It differs for people.
Depends if they bleed out of its mouth than it needs the vet but it is normal for a baby rabbit to bleed out of its bottom.
It is not normal to bleed during pregnancy.
Yes her uterus has been removed so she will bleed for a week or 10 days, if the bleeding is excessive or goes on longer you should contact your Vet immediately.
I started to say medical insurance, but a better answer is platelets in your blood. Platelets serve to form clots to stop bleeding.
it is totally normal for you to bleed after peeing after sex, you obviouslly do it too much or he has just hit a certain spot and it makes you bleed, totally normal.
Without getting into the nitty-gritty details....if your "bleed time" is longer than the normal limits, it means there is a coagulopathy---or a problem with the clotting process. There is a multitude of reasons to why this can occur, but simply put, if you're blood takes longer to clot (ie stop the bleed) there is some sort of problem with your platelets, coagulation cascade, coagulation factors, or regulators of the coagulation system.
Internal bleeding is when you bleed on the inside as where normal bleeding is where you bleed on the outside
is it normal to have a period twice a month and bleed when you had a bowel movement or and bleed heavy and think you pregnant is it because of sex but doing in rectum
its never supposed to bleed and if they do your stupid
yes it is normal. it will bleed until the skin becomes used to it. dont worry.
If you first started on it, then yes, it can take anywhere from 3-6 months for some female bodies to get use to it. This also varies from woman to woman. If you've been on it for longer and you've never missed a pill(s); consult your gyno.