No you just won't have a period that month because of the egg
If the fertilized egg does not implant in the uterus, it will not develop further and will be flushed out of the body during menstruation. This often happens without the woman even realizing she was briefly pregnant.
If an egg did not implant, you may not experience any symptoms. However, some signs that implantation did not occur might include a normal menstrual period, absence of pregnancy symptoms, or a negative pregnancy test after a missed period. Consulting with a healthcare provider can help determine if implantation was successful.
After fertilization, the egg implants in the lining of the uterus. It can implant on any side of the uterus where the endometrial lining is thick enough to support pregnancy.
No, implantation is necessary for a pregnancy to occur. If a fertilized egg does not implant into the uterus, pregnancy cannot proceed. The shedding of the uterine lining during a period signifies that implantation did not occur.
It is possible for a fertilized egg not implant in the uterine lining, it could be due to stress, certain drugs or medications, or that the egg was not viable. This situation is very common, possibly happening to a third of fertilized eggs.
you should expect it on the day it suppose to come on.. Implantation happens a week before your period..so if it didn't happen you got til when your period should come on.
No, two days after your period you may not have even ovulated...let alone concieved and the fertilised egg travelled down the fallopian tubes to implant in the uterus. Bleeding two days after your period is likely just spotting at the end of your period, or may be ovulation spotting.
If the fertilized egg does not implant in the uterus, it will not develop further and will be flushed out of the body during menstruation. This often happens without the woman even realizing she was briefly pregnant.
If a sperm fertilizes an egg, the female will not have a menstrual cycle for that month as the fertilized egg will implant in the uterine lining and develop into a pregnancy.
Yes-- it's possible. It happened to me. If you ovulated 6-12 days before your period was due and the egg was fertilized, you could have implantation (and bleeding) on the day of your period!
If an egg did not implant, you may not experience any symptoms. However, some signs that implantation did not occur might include a normal menstrual period, absence of pregnancy symptoms, or a negative pregnancy test after a missed period. Consulting with a healthcare provider can help determine if implantation was successful.
During a normal 28 day cycle you will ovulate on day 14. Day 1 of the cycle being the first day of your period. At this time you have the hormones oestrogen and progesterone present. If the egg is fertilised then these hormones remain at a higher level and menstuation does not happen and the egg implants. If the egg is not fertilised the the oestrogen and progesterone levels fall and menses begins. [Mentruation is a means of shedding an unfertilised egg then preparing for the next egg to implant should it be fertilised during the next cycle]. Hope this helps.
It's possible to have bleeding a day after ovulation, but unlikely to have a "real" period a day after releasing an egg.
The hormones don't prevent ovulation or conception. The lining of your uterus is still enriched with blood, but the hormones trick the body into not allowing the zygote to implant. That's if you did conceive that month. The zygote is in effect immediately miscarried. If it's an egg, it also does not implant. After no implantation, your body flushes the egg (or zygote) and also the lining of your uterus. You have a period.
Between day 1 and 21 of your cycle your uterus wall starts to thicken so that a fertilized egg can implant there and turn into a fetus (baby) when an egg doesn't fertilize the uterus wall just starts to break away and that is the blood that you get during your period. However if a egg is fertilized then the egg can implant and the wall will be how the mother and baby are connected and how the baby will gets its nutrients via the umbilical chord. I know this through having 4 miscarriages and having a large interest in the reproductive cycle since I was 11 :) xx
endometrium
the uterus